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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 290: R1052-R1061, 2006. First published November 23, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00381.2005
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SLEEP AND TEMPERATURE REGULATION

Challenging the sleep homeostat does not influence the thermoregulatory system in men: evidence from a nap vs. sleep-deprivation study

Kurt Kräuchi, Vera Knoblauch, Anna Wirz-Justice, and Christian Cajochen

Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric University Clinics, Basel, Switzerland

Submitted 31 May 2005 ; accepted in final form 8 November 2005

The purpose of our study was to understand the relationship between the components of the three-process model of sleepiness regulation (homeostatic, circadian, and sleep inertia) and the thermoregulatory system. This was achieved by comparing the impact of a 40-h sleep deprivation vs. a 40-h multiple nap paradigm (10 cycles with 150/75 min wakefulness/sleep episodes) on distal and proximal skin temperatures, core body temperature (CBT), melatonin secretion, subjective sleepiness, and nocturnal sleep EEG slow-wave activity in eight healthy young men in a "controlled posture" protocol. The main finding of the study was that accumulation of sleep pressure increased subjective sleepiness and slow-wave activity during the succeeding recovery night but did not influence the thermoregulatory system as measured by distal, proximal, and CBT. The circadian rhythm of sleepiness (and proximal temperature) was significantly correlated and phase locked with CBT, whereas distal temperature and melatonin secretion were phase advanced (by 113 ± 28 and 130 ± 30 min, respectively; both P < 0.005). This provides evidence for a primary role of distal vasodilatation in the circadian regulation of CBT and its relationship with sleepiness. Specific thermoregulatory changes occur at lights off and on. After lights off, skin temperatures increased and were most pronounced for distal; after lights on, the converse occurred. The decay in distal temperature (vasoconstriction) was significantly correlated with the disappearance of sleep inertia. These effects showed minor and nonsignificant circadian modulation. In summary, the thermoregulatory system seems to be independent of the sleep homeostat, but the circadian modulation of sleepiness and sleep inertia is clearly associated with thermoregulatory changes.

circadian rhythm; skin and core body temperature; electroencephalogram slow-wave activity



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: K. Kräuchi, Psychiatric University Clinics, Centre for Chronobiology, Wilhelm Klein Strasse 27, H4025 Basel, Switzerland (e-mail: kurt.kraeuchi{at}upkbs.ch)







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