2000
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/23.3.1h
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Effects of a Nocturnal Environment Perceived as Warm on Subsequent Daytime Sleep in Humans

Abstract: BED-TIME present alterations in their nocturnal sleep. Several adverse effects, which are known to reduce the subsequent vigilance level, have been determined, such as partial sleep deprivation and/or sleep fragmentation. Surprisingly, the influence of thermal stressors on subsequent daytime recovery sleep remains unknown, as only one such study has been made, 5 but it did not provide the magnitude of sleep changes. Moreover, the hypnic alterations provoked by thermal stressors may be enhanced by the unusual c… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This invariance was also found in young adults exposed to a moderate warm stress at night (Bradley 1994;Dewasmes et al 2000). Eventually, bearing in mind that there are limited details available in the Bradley paper, it appears that SWS occurring during a morning sleep is relatively insensitive to prior moderate nocturnal passive warming or cooling.…”
Section: Sws Changesmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…This invariance was also found in young adults exposed to a moderate warm stress at night (Bradley 1994;Dewasmes et al 2000). Eventually, bearing in mind that there are limited details available in the Bradley paper, it appears that SWS occurring during a morning sleep is relatively insensitive to prior moderate nocturnal passive warming or cooling.…”
Section: Sws Changesmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…This hypothesis was notably corroborated by the fact that an active thermal stress (heat storage due to exercise) can also diachronically increase the nocturnal REM sleep, on the condition that the imposed thermal stress remains modest, thus enabling the brain to deal with it (Buguet et al 1998). REM sleep being involved in memory processing (Dujardin et al 1990;Hennevin et al 1995;Smith 1995), we also assumed that ''consciously felt thermophysiological changes'' could be potent sensory informations that may be open to retention during subsequent REM sleep (Dewasmes et al 2000). Eventually, it may be that the REM-sleep increase observed helps an individual to better tolerate moderate thermal stresses, especially if they are repeated.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 77%
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