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Cardiac changes during sleep in sleep-deprived infants
Authors:Franco Patricia  Seret Nicole  Van Hees Jean Noël  Lanquart Jean-Pol  Groswasser José  Kahn André
Affiliation:Pediatric Sleep Unit, Neuropediatrics, Erasmus Hospital, Brussels, Belgium. Patricia.Franco@skynet.be
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the influence of a brief period of sleep deprivation on cardiac autonomic controls during sleep in healthy infants. DESIGN: Twelve healthy infants with a median age of 8 weeks (range, 7 to 18 weeks) were recorded polygraphically during a morning and an afternoon nap in a sleep laboratory. They were sleep deprived for approximately 2 hours, either in the morning or in the afternoon, before being allowed to fall asleep. Six infants were sleep deprived before the morning nap, and 6 before the afternoon nap. During both naps, their sleep, breathing, and heart-rate characteristics were continuously recorded. Spectral analysis of heart rate was evaluated as a function of sleep stages. Two major peaks were recognizable: a low-frequency component related to sympathetic and parasympathetic activities and a high-frequency component reflecting parasympathetic tonus. The ratio of low-frequency to high-frequency powers was calculated as an index of sympathovagal interaction. RESULTS: When sleep deprived, the infants had an increase in basal heart rate during non-rapid eye movement sleep (P=.021). With sleep deprivation, the ratio of low-frequency to high-frequency powers increased in non-rapid eye movement sleep (P=.005). These findings were consistent with an increase in sympathetic tone. CONCLUSION: Infants exposed to short-term sleep deprivation manifest changes in cardiac autonomic controls during sleep. These findings could be relevant to mechanisms associated with the sudden infant death syndrome.
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