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Energy expenditure during sleep, sleep deprivation and sleep following sleep deprivation in adult humans.


ABSTRACT: Sleep has been proposed to be a physiological adaptation to conserve energy, but little research has examined this proposed function of sleep in humans. We quantified effects of sleep, sleep deprivation and recovery sleep on whole-body total daily energy expenditure (EE) and on EE during the habitual day and nighttime. We also determined effects of sleep stage during baseline and recovery sleep on EE. Seven healthy participants aged 22 ± 5 years (mean ± s.d.) maintained ?8 h per night sleep schedules for 1 week before the study and consumed a weight-maintenance diet for 3 days prior to and during the laboratory protocol. Following a habituation night, subjects lived in a whole-room indirect calorimeter for 3 days. The first 24 h served as baseline – 16 h wakefulness, 8 h scheduled sleep – and this was followed by 40 h sleep deprivation and 8 h scheduled recovery sleep. Findings show that, compared to baseline, 24 h EE was significantly increased by ?7% during the first 24 h of sleep deprivation and was significantly decreased by ?5% during recovery, which included hours awake 25-40 and 8 h recovery sleep. During the night time, EE was significantly increased by ?32% on the sleep deprivation night and significantly decreased by ?4% during recovery sleep compared to baseline. Small differences in EE were observed among sleep stages, but wakefulness during the sleep episode was associated with increased energy expenditure. These findings provide support for the hypothesis that sleep conserves energy and that sleep deprivation increases total daily EE in humans.

SUBMITTER: Jung CM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3039272 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Energy expenditure during sleep, sleep deprivation and sleep following sleep deprivation in adult humans.

Jung Christopher M CM   Melanson Edward L EL   Frydendall Emily J EJ   Perreault Leigh L   Eckel Robert H RH   Wright Kenneth P KP  

The Journal of physiology 20101108 Pt 1


Sleep has been proposed to be a physiological adaptation to conserve energy, but little research has examined this proposed function of sleep in humans. We quantified effects of sleep, sleep deprivation and recovery sleep on whole-body total daily energy expenditure (EE) and on EE during the habitual day and nighttime. We also determined effects of sleep stage during baseline and recovery sleep on EE. Seven healthy participants aged 22 ± 5 years (mean ± s.d.) maintained ∼8 h per night sleep sche  ...[more]

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