Heart rate and heart rate variability following sleep deprivation in retired night shift workers and retired day workers

Shift workers experience poor sleep and dysregulated cardiac autonomic function during sleep. However, it is unknown if this dysregulation persists into retirement, potentially accelerating the age-associated risk for adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Using sleep deprivation as a physiological challe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychophysiology 2023-12, Vol.60 (12), p.e14374-e14374
Hauptverfasser: Jain, Naveen, Lehrer, H Matthew, Chin, Brian N, Tracy, Eunjin Lee, Evans, Marissa A, Krafty, Robert T, Buysse, Daniel J, Hall, Martica H
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container_end_page e14374
container_issue 12
container_start_page e14374
container_title Psychophysiology
container_volume 60
creator Jain, Naveen
Lehrer, H Matthew
Chin, Brian N
Tracy, Eunjin Lee
Evans, Marissa A
Krafty, Robert T
Buysse, Daniel J
Hall, Martica H
description Shift workers experience poor sleep and dysregulated cardiac autonomic function during sleep. However, it is unknown if this dysregulation persists into retirement, potentially accelerating the age-associated risk for adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Using sleep deprivation as a physiological challenge to cardiovascular autonomic function, we compared heart rate (HR) and high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV) during baseline and recovery sleep following sleep deprivation between retired night shift and day workers. Participants were retired night shift (N = 33) and day workers (N = 37) equated on age (mean [standard deviation] = 68.0 [5.6] years), sex (47% female), race/ethnicity (86% White), and body mass index. Participants completed a 60-h lab protocol including one night of baseline polysomnography-monitored sleep, followed by 36 h of sleep deprivation and one night of recovery sleep. Continuously recorded HR was used to calculate HF-HRV. Linear mixed models compared HR and HF-HRV during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and REM sleep between groups during baseline and recovery nights. Groups did not differ on HR or HF-HRV during NREM or REM sleep (ps > .05) and did not show differential responses to sleep deprivation. In the full sample, HR increased and HF-HRV decreased from baseline to recovery during NREM (ps 
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subjects Aged
Autonomic nervous system
Autonomic Nervous System - physiology
Body mass index
Cardiovascular diseases
Child, Preschool
Female
Heart
Heart rate
Heart Rate - physiology
Humans
Male
Nighttime
NREM sleep
REM sleep
Retirement
Sleep
Sleep Deprivation
Workers
title Heart rate and heart rate variability following sleep deprivation in retired night shift workers and retired day workers
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