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Human slow wave sleep: A review and appraisal of recent findings,with implications for sleep functions,and psychiatric illness
Authors:J Horne
Institution:(1) Department of Human Sciences, Loughborough University, LE11 3TU Loughborough, Leicestershire, (England)
Abstract:Recent findings concerning human slow wave sleep (hSWS-stages 3+4; delta EEG activity) are critically reviewed. Areas covered include the significance of the first hSWS cycle; hSWS in extended sleep; relationship between hSWS, prior wakefulness and sleep loss; hSWS influence on sleep length; problems with hSWS deprivation; influence of the circadian rhythm; individual differences in hSWS, especially, age, gender and constitutional variables such as physical fitness and body composition. Transient increases in hSWS can be produced by increasing both the quality and quantity of prior wakefulness, with an underlying mechanism perhaps relating to the waking level of brain metabolism. Whilst there may also be thermoregulatory influences on hSWS, hypotheses that energy conservation and brain cooling are major roles for hSWS are debatable. hSWS seems to offer some form of cerebral recovery, with the prefrontal cortex being particularly implicated. The hSWS characteristics of certain forms of major psychiatric disorders may well endorse this prefrontal link.
Keywords:Human sleep  slow wave sleep  sleep loss  circadian rhythm  brain metabolism  thermoregulation  schizophrenia  depression  frontal cortex
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