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Experimental Sleep Restriction Causes Endothelial Dysfunction in Healthy Humans
Author(s) -
Calvin Andrew D.,
Covassin Naima,
Kremers Walter K.,
Adachi Taro,
Macedo Paula,
Albuquerque Felipe N.,
Bukartyk Jan,
Davison Diane E.,
Levine James A.,
Singh Prachi,
Wang Shihan,
Somers Virend K.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.114.001143
Subject(s) - medicine , sleep restriction , endothelial dysfunction , brachial artery , sleep (system call) , sleep deprivation , vasodilation , randomized controlled trial , endothelium , randomization , cardiology , endocrinology , circadian rhythm , blood pressure , computer science , operating system
Background Epidemiologic evidence suggests a link between short sleep duration and cardiovascular risk, although the nature of any relationship and mechanisms remain unclear. Short sleep duration has also been linked to an increase in cardiovascular events. Endothelial dysfunction has itself been implicated as a mediator of heightened cardiovascular risk. We sought to determine the effect of 8 days/8 nights of partial sleep restriction on endothelial function in healthy humans. Methods and Results Sixteen healthy volunteers underwent a randomized study of usual sleep versus sleep restriction of two‐thirds normal sleep time for 8 days/8 nights in a hospital‐based clinical research unit. The main outcome was endothelial function measured by flow‐mediated brachial artery vasodilatation ( FMD ). Those randomized to sleep restriction slept 5.1 hours/night during the experimental period compared with 6.9 hours/night in the control group. Sleep restriction was associated with significant impairment in FMD (8.6±4.6% during the initial pre‐randomization acclimation phase versus 5.2±3.4% during the randomized experimental phase, P =0.01) whereas no change was seen in the control group (5.0±3.0 during the acclimation phase versus 6.73±2.9% during the experimental phase, P =0.10) for a between‐groups difference of −4.40% (95% CI −7.00 to −1.81%, P =0.003). No change was seen in non‐flow mediated vasodilatation ( NFMD ) in either group. Conclusion In healthy individuals, moderate sleep restriction causes endothelial dysfunction. Clinical Trial Registration URL : ClinicalTrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT 01334788.

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