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Sleep
is a naturally recurring state of relatively suspended sensory and motor activity in animals, characterized by total or partial unconsciousness and the nearly complete inactivity of voluntary muscles. It is distinguished from quiet wakefulness by a decreased ability to react to stimuli, and it is more easily reversible than hibernation or coma. It is observed in all mammals, including humans, all birds, and many reptiles, amphibians, and fish. In humans, other mammals, and a substantial majority of other animals that have been studied (such as some species of fish, birds, ants, and fruit flies), regular sleep is essential for survival.
The purposes and mechanisms of sleep are only partly clear and are the subject of intense research. [1]
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SLEEP TICKETS
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Physiology
Stages of sleep
In mammals and birds, sleep is divided into two broad types:
Rapid Eye Movement (REM) and
Non-Rapid Eye Movement (NREM or non-REM) sleep. Each type has a distinct set of associated physiological, neurological, and psychological features. The
American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) further divides NREM into three stages: N1, N2, and N3, the last of which is also called
delta, or
slow-wave, sleep (SWS).
[2]
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thumb highlighted by red box. Thirty seconds of deep sleep with greater than 50% delta waves.
Sleep proceeds in cycles of REM and NREM, the order normally being N1 ? N2 ? N3 ? N2 ? REM. There is a greater amount of deep sleep (stage N3) early in the night, while the proportion of REM sleep increases later in the night and just before natural awakening.
The stages of sleep were first described in 1937 by
Alfred Lee Loomis and coworkers, who separated the different EEG features of sleep into five levels (A to E), which represented the spectrum of wakefulness to deep sleep.
[3] In 1953, REM sleep was discovered as distinct, and thus
William Dement and
Nathaniel Kleitman reclassified sleep into four NREM stages and REM.
[4] The staging criteria were standardized in 1968 by
Allan Rechtschaffen and
Anthony Kales in the "R&K sleep scoring manual."
[5] In the R&K standard, NREM sleep was divided into four stages, with slow-wave sleep comprising stages 3 and 4. In stage 3, delta waves made up less than 50% of the total wave patterns, while they made up more than 50% in stage 4. Furthermore, REM sleep was sometimes referred to as stage 5.
In 2004, the AASM commissioned the AASM Visual Scoring Task Force to review the R&K scoring system. The review culminated in several changes, the most significant being the combination of stages 3 and 4 into Stage N3. The revised scoring was published in 2007 as
The AASM Manual for the Scoring of Sleep and Associated Events
.
[6] Arousals and respiratory, cardiac, and movement events were also added.
[7] [8]
Sleep stages and other characteristics of sleep are commonly assessed by
polysomnography in a specialized sleep laboratory. Measurements taken include
electroencephalography (EEG) of brain waves,
electrooculography (EOG) of eye movements, and
electromyography (EMG) of
skeletal muscle activity. In humans, each sleep cycle lasts from 90 to 110 minutes on average,
[9] and each stage may have a distinct physiological function. Drugs such as
sleeping pills and
alcoholic beverages can suppress certain stages of sleep, leading to
sleep deprivation. This can result in sleep that exhibits
loss of consciousness but does not fulfill its physiological functions (i.e., one may still feel tired after apparently sufficient sleep). REM and slow-wave sleep are both homeostatically driven; people and most animals selectively deprived of one of these stages will rebound once uninhibited sleep is allowed. This finding suggests that both of these stages are essential.
NREM sleep
According to the 2007 AASM standards, NREM consists of three stages. There is relatively little dreaming in NREM.
Stage N1
refers to the transition of the brain from
alpha waves having a frequency of 8 to 13
Hz (common in the awake state) to
theta waves having a frequency of 4 to 7 Hz. This stage is sometimes referred to as somnolence or drowsy sleep. Sudden twitches and
hypnic jerks, also known as positive
myoclonus, may be associated with the onset of sleep during N1. Some people may also experience
hypnagogic hallucinations during this stage, which can be troublesome to them. During N1, the subject loses some
muscle tone and most conscious awareness of the external environment.
Stage N2
is characterized by
sleep spindles ranging from 12 to 16 Hz and
K-complexes. During this stage, muscular activity as measured by EMG decreases, and conscious awareness of the external environment disappears. This stage occupies 45 to 55% of total sleep in adults.
Stage N3
(deep or
slow-wave sleep) is characterized by
delta waves ranging from 0.5 to 4 Hz (also called delta rhythms). This is the stage in which such
parasomnias as
night terrors,
bedwetting,
sleepwalking, and
sleep-talking occur.
REM sleep
Rapid eye movement sleep, or REM sleep, accounts for 20–25% of total sleep time in normal human adults. The criteria for REM sleep include rapid eye movements as well as a rapid low-voltage EEG. Most memorable dreaming occurs in this stage. At least in mammals, a descending muscular
atonia is seen. Such paralysis may be necessary to protect organisms from self-damage through physically acting out scenes from the often-vivid dreams that occur during this stage.
Timing
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Sleep timing is controlled by the
circadian clock, sleep-wake
homeostasis, and in humans, within certain bounds, willed behavior. The circadian clock—an inner timekeeping, temperature-fluctuating, enzyme-controlling device—works in tandem with
adenosine, a neurotransmitter that inhibits many of the bodily processes associated with wakefulness. Adenosine is created over the course of the day; high levels of adenosine lead to sleepiness. In
diurnal animals, sleepiness occurs as the circadian element causes the release of the hormone
melatonin and a gradual decrease in core
body temperature. The timing is affected by one's
chronotype. It is the circadian rhythm that determines the ideal timing of a correctly structured and restorative sleep episode.
[10]
Homeostatic sleep propensity—the need for sleep as a function of the amount of time elapsed since the last adequate sleep episode—must be balanced against the circadian element for satisfactory sleep.
[11] Along with corresponding messages from the circadian clock, this tells the body it needs to sleep.
[12] Sleep offset (awakening) is primarily determined by circadian rhythm. A person who regularly awakens at an early hour will generally not be able to sleep much later than the person's normal waking time, even if moderately sleep-deprived.
Sleep duration is affected by
circadian rhythm which is regulated by a gene named DEC2. Some people have a mutation of this gene and sleep two hours less than normal. Neurology professor Ying-Hui Fu and colleagues bred mice that carried the DEC2 mutation and slept less than normal mice.
[13]
Optimal amount in humans
Adult
The optimal amount of sleep is not a meaningful concept unless the timing of that sleep is seen in relation to an individual's
circadian rhythms. A person's major sleep episode is relatively inefficient and inadequate when it occurs at the "wrong" time of day; one should be asleep at least six hours before the lowest body temperature.
[14] The timing is correct when the following two circadian markers occur after the middle of the sleep episode and before awakening:
[15]
- maximum concentration of the hormone melatonin, and
- minimum core body temperature.
The
National Sleep Foundation in the United States maintains that seven to nine hours of sleep for adult humans is optimal and that sufficient sleep benefits alertness, memory,
problem solving, and overall health, as well as reducing the risk of accidents.
[16] A widely publicized 2003 study
[17] performed at
the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine demonstrated that cognitive performance declines with six or fewer hours of sleep.
A
University of California, San Diego, psychiatry study of more than one million adults found that people who live the longest self-report sleeping for six to seven hours each night.
[18] Another study of sleep duration and mortality risk in women showed similar results.
[19] Other studies show that "sleeping more than 7 to 8 hours per day has been consistently associated with increased mortality," though this study suggests the cause is probably other factors such as depression and socioeconomic status, which would correlate statistically.
[20] It has been suggested that the correlation between lower sleep hours and reduced morbidity only occurs with those who wake after less sleep naturally, rather than those who use an alarm.
Researchers at the
University of Warwick and
University College London have found that lack of sleep can more than double the risk of death from
cardiovascular disease, but that too much sleep can also double the risk of death.
[21] [22] Professor Francesco Cappuccio said, "Short sleep has been shown to be a
risk factor for weight gain,
hypertension, and
Type 2 diabetes, sometimes leading to mortality; but in contrast to the short sleep-mortality association, it appears that no potential mechanisms by which long sleep could be associated with increased mortality have yet been investigated. Some candidate causes for this include depression, low socioeconomic status, and cancer-related fatigue. …In terms of prevention, our findings indicate that consistently sleeping around seven hours per night is optimal for health, and a sustained reduction may predispose to ill health."
Furthermore, sleep difficulties are closely associated with psychiatric disorders such as
depression,
alcoholism, and
bipolar disorder.
[23] Up to 90% of adults with depression are found to have sleep difficulties. Dysregulation found on EEG includes disturbances in sleep continuity, decreased delta sleep and altered REM patterns with regard to latency, distribution across the night and density of eye movements.
[24]
Hours by age
Children need more sleep per day than adults to develop and function properly: up to 18 hours for
newborn babies, with a declining rate as a child ages.
A newborn baby spends almost 9 hours a day in REM sleep. By the age of five or so, only slightly over two hours is spent in REM.
[25]
Age and condition
| Average amount of sleep per day
|
Newborn
| up to 18 hours
|
1–12 months
| 14–18 hours
|
1–3 years
| 12–15 hours
|
3–5 years
| 11–13 hours
|
5–12 years
| 9–11 hours
|
Adolescents
| 9–10 hours [26]
|
Adults, including elderly
| 7–8 (+) hours
|
Pregnant women
| 8 (+) hours
|
Sleep debt
Sleep debt is the effect of not getting enough rest and sleep; a large debt causes mental, emotional, and physical fatigue. It is unclear why a lack of sleep causes irritability; however, theories are emerging that suggest if the body produces insufficient
cortisol during deep sleep, it can have negative effects on the alertness and emotions of a person during the day.
Sleep debt results in diminished abilities to perform high-level cognitive functions. Neurophysiological and functional
imaging studies have demonstrated that frontal regions of the brain are particularly responsive to homeostatic sleep pressure.
[27]
Scientists do not agree on how much sleep debt it is possible to accumulate; whether it is accumulated against an individual's average sleep or some other benchmark; nor on whether the prevalence of sleep debt among adults has changed appreciably in the
industrialized world in recent decades. It is likely that children are sleeping less than previously in
Western societies.
[28]
Genetics
A considerable amount of sleep-related behavior is apparently hard-wired into human biology - humans in all cultures get tired, require sleep for good health, and have similar symptoms when sleep deprived. Scientific research has identified some genetic variations, including:
- A mutation that moves consolidated sleep earlier, resulting in a sleep cycle from 7:30pm to 3:30am. [29]
- A mutation in BHLHB3 which apparently reduces the amount sleep needed for healthy living to 6 hours from 8.
Functions
The multiple theories proposed to explain the function of sleep reflect the as-yet incomplete understanding of the subject. It is likely that sleep evolved to fulfill some primeval function and has taken over multiple functions over time—just as with, for example, the
larynx which today controls the passage of food and air and provides phonation for communicating and other social purposes.
It has been pointed out that, if sleep were not essential, one would expect to find 1) animal species that do not sleep at all, 2) animals that do not need recovery sleep when they stay awake longer than usual, and 3) animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep. No animals have been found to date that satisfy any of these criteria.
[30]
Some of the many proposed functions of sleep are as follows.
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[31] indicating impairment of normal maintenance by sleep.
Restoration
Wound healing has been shown to be affected by sleep. A study conducted by Gumustekin et al.
[32] in 2004 shows sleep deprivation hindering the
healing of burns on rats.
It has been shown that sleep deprivation affects the
immune system. In a study by Zager et al. in 2007,
[33] rats were deprived of sleep for 24 hours. When compared with a
control group, the sleep-deprived rats'
blood tests indicated a 20% decrease in
white blood cell count, a significant change in the immune system. It is now possible to state that "sleep loss impairs immune function and immune challenge alters sleep," and it has been suggested that mammalian species which invest in longer sleep times are investing in the immune system, as species with the longer sleep times have higher white blood cell counts.
[34]
It has yet to be proven that sleep duration affects
somatic growth. One study by Jenni et al.
[35] in 2007 recorded growth, height, and weight, as correlated to parent-reported time in bed in 305 children over a period of nine years (age 1–10). It was found that "the variation of sleep duration among children does not seem to have an effect on growth." It has been shown that sleep—more specifically, slow-wave sleep (SWS)—does affect
growth hormone levels in adult men. During eight hours' sleep, Van Cauter, Leproult, and Plat
[36] found that the men with a high percentage of SWS (average 24%) also had high growth hormone secretion, while subjects with a low percentage of SWS (average 9%) had low growth hormone secretion.
There are multiple arguments supporting the restorative function of sleep. We are rested after sleeping, and it is natural to assume that this is a basic purpose of sleep. The metabolic phase during sleep is anabolic; anabolic hormones such as growth hormones (as mentioned above) are secreted preferentially during sleep. The duration of sleep among species is, in general,
inversely related to animal size and directly related to
basal metabolic rate. Rats with a very high basal metabolic rate sleep for up to 14 hours a day, whereas elephants and giraffes with lower BMRs sleep only 3–4 hours per day.
Energy conservation could as well have been accomplished by resting quiescent without shutting off the organism from the environment, potentially a dangerous situation. A sedentary nonsleeping animal is more likely to survive predators, while still preserving energy. Sleep, therefore, seems to serve another purpose, or other purposes, than simply conserving energy; for example,
hibernating animals waking up from hibernation go into rebound sleep because of lack of sleep during the hibernation period. They are definitely well-rested and are conserving energy during hibernation, but need sleep for something else.
[37] Rats kept awake indefinitely develop skin lesions,
hyperphagia, loss of body mass,
hypothermia, and eventually,
septicemia and death.
[38]
Anabolic/catabolic
Non-REM sleep may be an
anabolic state marked by physiological processes of growth and rejuvenation of the organism's immune, nervous, muscular, and skeletal systems (with some exceptions). Wakefulness may perhaps be viewed as a cyclical, temporary, hyperactive
catabolic state during which the organism acquires nourishment and reproduces.
Ontogenesis
According to the
ontogenetic hypothesis of REM sleep, the activity occurring during neonatal REM sleep (or active sleep) seems to be particularly important to the developing organism (Marks et al., 1995). Studies investigating the effects of deprivation of active sleep have shown that deprivation early in life can result in behavioral problems, permanent sleep disruption, decreased brain mass (Mirmiran et al., 1983), and an abnormal amount of neuronal cell death (Morrissey, Duntley & Anch, 2004).
REM sleep appears to be important for development of the brain. REM sleep occupies the majority of time of sleep of infants, who spend most of their time sleeping. Among different species, the more immature the baby is born, the more time it spends in REM sleep. Proponents also suggest that REM-induced muscle inhibition in the presence of brain activation exists to allow for brain development by activating the synapses, yet without any motor consequences that may get the infant in trouble. Additionally, REM deprivation results in developmental abnormalities later in life.
However, this does not explain why older adults still need REM sleep.
Aquatic mammal infants do not have REM sleep in infancy;
[39] REM sleep in those animals increases as they age.
Memory processing
Scientists have shown numerous ways in which sleep is related to
memory. In a study conducted by Turner, Drummond, Salamat, and Brown,
[40] working memory was shown to be affected by sleep deprivation. Working memory is important because it keeps information active for further processing and supports higher-level
cognitive functions such as
decision making,
reasoning, and
episodic memory. Turner et al. allowed 18 women and 22 men to sleep only 26 minutes per night over a four-day period. Subjects were given initial
cognitive tests while well-rested, and then were tested again twice a day during the four days of sleep deprivation. On the final test, the average working memory span of the sleep-deprived group had dropped by 38% in comparison to the control group.
Memory seems to be affected differently by certain stages of sleep such as REM and
slow-wave sleep (SWS). In one study cited in Born, Rasch, and Gais,
[41] multiple groups of human subjects were used: wake control groups and sleep test groups. Sleep and wake groups were taught a task and were then tested on it, both on early and late nights, with the order of nights balanced across participants. When the subjects' brains were scanned during sleep, hypnograms revealed that SWS was the dominant sleep stage during the early night, representing around 23% on average for sleep stage activity. The early-night test group performed 16% better on the
declarative memory test than the control group. During late-night sleep, REM became the most active sleep stage at about 24%, and the late-night test group performed 25% better on the
procedural memory test than the control group. This indicates that procedural memory benefits from late, REM-rich sleep, whereas declarative memory benefits from early, SWS-rich sleep.
A study conducted by Datta
[42] indirectly supports these results. The subjects chosen were 22 male rats. A box was constructed wherein a single rat could move freely from one end to the other. The bottom of the box was made of a steel grate. A light would shine in the box accompanied by a sound. After a five-second delay, an electrical shock would be applied. Once the shock commenced, the rat could move to the other end of the box, ending the shock immediately. The rat could also use the five-second delay to move to the other end of the box and avoid the shock entirely. The length of the shock never exceeded five seconds. This was repeated 30 times for half the rats. The other half, the control group, was placed in the same trial, but the rats were shocked regardless of their reaction. After each of the training sessions, the rat would be placed in a recording cage for six hours of polygraphic recordings. This process was repeated for three consecutive days. This study found that during the posttrial sleep recording session, rats spent 25.47% more time in REM sleep after learning trials than after control trials. These trials support the results of the Born et al. study, indicating an obvious correlation between REM sleep and
procedural knowledge.
An observation of the Datta study is that the learning group spent 180% more time in SWS than did the control group during the post-trial sleep-recording session. This phenomenon is supported by a study performed by Kudrimoti, Barnes, and McNaughton.
[43] This study shows that after spatial exploration activity, patterns of
hippocampal place cells are reactivated during SWS following the experiment. In a study by Kudrimoti et al., seven rats were run through a linear track using rewards on either end. The rats would then be placed in the track for 30 minutes to allow them to adjust (PRE), then they ran the track with reward-based training for 30 minutes (RUN), and then they were allowed to rest for 30 minutes. During each of these three periods,
EEG data were collected for information on the rats' sleep stages. Kudrimoti et al. computed the mean firing rates of hippocampal place cells during prebehavior SWS (PRE) and three ten-minute intervals in postbehavior SWS (POST) by averaging across 22 track-running sessions from seven rats. The results showed that ten minutes after the trial RUN session, there was a 12% increase in the mean firing rate of hippocampal place cells from the PRE level; however, after 20 minutes, the mean firing rate returned rapidly toward the PRE level. The elevated firing of hippocampal place cells during SWS after spatial exploration could explain why there were elevated levels of SWS sleep in Datta's study, as it also dealt with a form of spatial exploration.
The different studies all suggest that there is a correlation between sleep and the complex functions of memory. Harvard sleep researchers Saper and Stickgold
[44] point out that an essential part of memory and learning consists of nerve cell
dendrites' sending information to the cell body to be organized into new neuronal connections. This process demands that no external information is presented to these dendrites, and they suggest that this may be why it is during sleep that we solidify memories and organize knowledge.
Preservation
The "Preservation and Protection" theory holds that sleep serves an adaptive function. It protects the animal during that portion of the 24-hour day in which being awake, and hence roaming around, would place the individual at greatest risk.
[45] Organisms do not require 24 hours to feed themselves and meet other necessities. From this perspective of adaptation, organisms are safer by staying out of harm's way, where potentially they could be prey to other, stronger organisms. They sleep at times that maximize their safety, given their physical capacities and their habitats. (Allison & Cicchetti, 1976; Webb, 1982).
However, this theory fails to explain why the brain disengages from the external environment during normal sleep. Another argument against the theory is that sleep is not simply a passive consequence of removing the animal from the environment, but is a "drive"; animals alter their behaviors in order to obtain sleep. Therefore, circadian regulation is more than sufficient to explain periods of activity and quiescence that are adaptive to an organism, but the more peculiar specializations of sleep probably serve different and unknown functions.
Moreover, the preservation theory does not explain why carnivores like lions, which are on top of the
food chain, sleep the most. By the preservation logic, these top carnivores should not need any sleep at all. Preservation also does not explain why aquatic mammals sleep while moving. Lethargy during these vulnerable hours would do the same and would be more advantageous, because the animal will be quiescent but still be able to respond to environmental challenges like predators, etc. Sleep rebound that occurs after a sleepless night will be maladaptive, but still occurs for a reason. For example, a zebra falling asleep the day after it spent the sleeping time running from a lion is more, not less, vulnerable to predation.
Dreaming
Dreaming is the perception of sensory images and sounds during sleep, in a sequence which the dreamer usually perceives more as an apparent participant than an observer. Dreaming is stimulated by the
pons and mostly occurs during the
REM phase of sleep.
People have proposed many
hypotheses about the functions of dreaming.
Sigmund Freud postulated that dreams are the symbolic expression of frustrated desires that had been relegated to the
unconscious mind, and he used
dream interpretation in the form of
psychoanalysis to uncover these desires. See Freud:
The Interpretation of Dreams.
Freud's work concerns the psychological role of dreams, which clearly does not exclude any physiological role they may have. It is not ruled out therefore by the increased modern interest in the organization and consolidation of recent
memory and experience. Recent claims that sleep has this overall role of consolidation and organization of synaptic connections formed during learning and experience.
John Allan Hobson and
Robert McCarley's activation synthesis theory proposes that dreams are caused by the
random firing of
neurons in the
cerebral cortex during the REM period. According to this theory, the
forebrain then creates a
story in an attempt to reconcile and make sense of the nonsensical sensory information presented to it; hence, the odd nature of many dreams.
[46]
Effect of food and drink on sleep
Sedatives
- Nonbenzodiazepine hypnotics, better known as sleep aids, such as eszopiclone (Lunesta), zalepon (Sonata), and zolpidem (Ambien) are commonly used as sleep aids prescribed by doctors to treat forms of insomnia. Nonbenzodiazopines are the most commonly prescribed and OTC sleep aids used worldwide and have been greatly growing in use since the 1990s. They target the GABAA receptor.
- Benzodiazepine
- Antihistamine
Depressants
Often, people start drinking alcohol in order to get to sleep (alcohol is initially a sedative and will cause
somnolence, encouraging sleep).
[47] However, being addicted to alcohol can lead to disrupted sleep, because alcohol has a
rebound effect later in the night. As a result, there is strong evidence linking alcoholism and insomnia.
[48]
Barbiturates cause drowsiness and have actions similar to alcohol in that it has a
rebound effect and inhibits REM sleep, so it is not used as a long term sleep aid.
[49]
Melatonin is a naturally occurring hormone that regulates sleepiness. It is made in the brain, where tryptophan is converted into serotonin and then into melatonin, which is released at night by the
pineal gland to induce and maintain sleep. Melatonin supplementation may be used as a sleep aid, both as a
hypnotic and as a
chronobiotic (see
phase response curve, PRC).
- Siesta and the "post-lunch dip"
Many people have a temporary drop in alertness in the early afternoon, commonly known as the "post-lunch dip." While a large meal can make a person feel sleepy, the post-lunch dip is mostly an effect of the
biological clock. People naturally feel most sleepy (have the greatest "drive for sleep") at two times of the day about 12 hours apart—for example, at 2:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. At those two times, the body clock "kicks in." At about 2 p.m. (14:00), it overrides the homeostatic buildup of sleep debt, allowing several more hours of wakefulness. At about 2 a.m. (02:00), with the daily sleep debt paid off, it "kicks in" again to ensure a few more hours of sleep.
The amino acid tryptophan is a building block of proteins. It has been claimed to contribute to sleepiness, since it is a precursor of the neurotransmitter serotonin, involved in sleep regulation. However, no solid data have ever linked modest dietary changes in tryptophan to changes in sleep.
Stimulants
Amphetamines (
amphetamine,
dextroamphetamine,
methamphetamine, etc.) are often used to treat
narcolepsy and
ADHD disorders and are used recreationally, in which case they may be referred to as "speed." Their most common effects are decreased hunger, anxiety, insomnia, stimulation, and increased alertness.
Adderall is a mixture of amphetamine salts used to treat ADHD.
Caffeine is a
stimulant that works by slowing the action of the hormones in the brain that cause
somnolence, particularly by acting as an
antagonist at
adenosine receptors. Effective dosage is individual, in part dependent on prior usage. It can cause a rapid reduction in alertness as it wears off.
- Cocaine and crack cocaine
Studies on cocaine have shown its effects to be mediated through the circadian rhythm system.
[50] This may be related to the onset of
hypersomnia (oversleeping) in regard to "Cocaine-Induced Sleep Disorder."
[51]
The stimulating effects of energy drinks come from stimulants such as caffeine, sugars, and
essential amino acids, and they will eventually create a rapid reduction in alertness similar to that of caffeine.
- MDMA, including similar drugs like MDA, MMDA, or bk-MDMA
The class of drugs called
empathogen-entactogens keep users awake with intense euphoria. Commonly known as "ecstasy."
Commonly known by the brand names
Ritalin
and
Concerta
, methylphenidate is similar in action to amphetamines and cocaine.
Causes of difficulty in sleeping
There are many reasons for poor sleep. Following
sleep hygienic principles may solve problems of physical or emotional discomfort.
[52] When pain, illness, drugs, or stress are the culprit, the cause must be treated.
Sleep disorders (including the
sleep apneas,
narcolepsy, primary
insomnia,
periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD),
restless leg syndrome (RLS), and the
circadian rhythm sleep disorders) are treatable.
Older people are more easily awoken by disturbances in the environment
[53] and may to some degree lose the ability to consolidate sleep. They need the same amount per day as they've always needed, but may need to take some of their sleep as daytime naps.
Anthropology of sleep
Research suggests that sleep patterns vary significantly across cultures.
[54] [55] The most striking differences are between societies that have plentiful sources of artificial light and ones that do not. The primary difference appears to be that prelight cultures have more broken-up sleep patterns.
For example, people might go to sleep far sooner after the sun sets, but then wake up several times throughout the night, punctuating their sleep with periods of wakefulness, perhaps lasting several hours.
The boundaries between sleeping and waking are blurred in these societies.
Some observers believe that nighttime sleep in these societies is most often split into two main periods, the first characterised primarily by deep sleep and the second by REM sleep. This
segmented sleep has led to expressions such as "first sleep," "watch," and "second sleep," which appear in literature from
preindustrial societies all over the world.
Some societies display a fragmented sleep pattern in which people sleep at all times of the day and night for shorter periods. In many
nomadic or
hunter-gatherer societies, people will sleep on and off throughout the day or night depending on what is happening.
[56]
Plentiful
artificial light has been available in the industrialised West since at least the mid-19th century, and sleep patterns have changed significantly everywhere that lighting has been introduced. In general, people sleep in a more concentrated burst through the night, going to sleep much later, although this is not always true.
In some societies, people generally sleep with at least another person (often many) or with animals. In others, people rarely sleep with anyone but a most intimate relation, such as a spouse. In almost all societies, sleeping partners are strongly regulated by social standards. For example, people might only sleep with their
immediate family,
extended family, spouses, their children, children of a certain age, children of specific gender, peers of a certain gender, friends, peers of equal social rank, or with no one at all. Sleep may be an actively social time, depending on the sleep groupings, with no constraints on noise or activity.
People sleep in a variety of locations. Some sleep directly on the ground; others on a skin or blanket; others sleep on platforms or
beds. Some sleep with blankets, some with pillows, some with simple headrests, some with no head support. These choices are shaped by a variety of factors, such as climate, protection from predators, housing type, technology, and the incidence of pests.
Sleep in nonhumans
Many animals sleep, but neurological sleep states are difficult to define in lower-order animals. In these animals, sleep is defined using behavioral characteristics such as minimal movement, postures typical for the species, and reduced responsiveness to external stimulation. Sleep is quickly reversible, as opposed to hibernation or
coma, and sleep deprivation is followed by longer or deeper sleep. Herbivores, who require a long waking period to gather and consume their diet, typically sleep less each day than similarly sized carnivores, who might well consume several days' supply of meat in a sitting.
Horses and other herbivorous ungulates can sleep while standing, but must necessarily lie down for REM sleep (which causes muscular atony) for short periods. Giraffes, for example, only need to lie down for REM sleep for a few minutes at a time. Bats sleep while hanging upside down. Some aquatic mammals and some birds can sleep with one half of the brain while the other half is awake, so-called
unihemispheric slow-wave sleep.
[57] Birds and mammals have cycles of non-REM and REM sleep (as described above for humans), though birds’ cycles are much shorter and they do not lose muscle tone (go limp) to the extent that most mammals do.
Many mammals sleep for a large proportion of each 24-hour period when they are very young.
[58] However,
killer whales and some
dolphins do not sleep during the first month of life.
[59] Such differences may be explained by the ability of land-mammal newborns to be easily protected by parents while sleeping, while marine animals must, even while very young, be more continuously vigilant for predators.
See also
Positions, practices, and rituals
- Co-sleeping
- Hypnosis
- Meditation
- Neutral spine
- Sleep hygiene
- Yoga Nidra
- Siesta
Other
- Alarm clock
- Dream world (plot device)
- Microsleep
- Morvan's syndrome
- Sudden infant death syndrome
- Cortisol awakening response
References
- Waking Up To Sleep
- The Visual Scoring of Sleep in Adults
- III Cerebral states during sleep, as studied by human brain potentials
- Cyclic variations in EEG during sleep and their relation to eye movements, body motility and dreaming
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