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Wikipedia

Sleep deprivation

Sleep deprivation, also known as sleep insufficiency[2] or sleeplessness, is the condition of not having adequate duration and/or quality of sleep to support decent alertness, performance, and health. It can be either chronic or acute and may vary widely in severity. All known animals sleep or exhibit some form of sleep behavior, and the importance of sleep is self-evident for humans, as nearly a third of a person's life is spent sleeping.[2]

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) recommendations for the amount of sleep needed decrease with age.[1] While sleep quantity is important, good sleep quality is also essential to avoid sleep disorders.[1]
Sleep deprivation
SpecialtySleep medicine
SymptomsFatigue, eye bags, poor memory, irritable mood, weight gain
ComplicationsCar and work accidents, weight gain, cardiovascular disease
CausesInsomnia, sleep apnea, stimulants (caffeine, amphetamine), voluntary imposition (school, work), mood disorders
TreatmentCognitive behavioral therapy, caffeine (to induce alertness), sleeping pills

The average adult needs to sleep for 7 to 8 hours every 24 hours, and sleep deprivation can occur if they do not get enough sleep.[3] Acute sleep deprivation is when a person sleeps less than usual or does not sleep at all for a short period of time, normally lasting one to two days, but tends to follow the sleepless pattern for longer with no outside factors in play. Chronic sleep deprivation is when a person routinely sleeps less than an optimal amount for optimal functioning. Chronic sleep deficiency is often confused with the term insomnia[citation needed]. Although both chronic sleep deficiency and insomnia share decreased quantity and/or quality of sleep as well as impaired function, their difference lies in the ability to fall asleep. To date, most sleep deprivation studies have focused on acute sleep deprivation, suggesting that acute sleep deprivation can cause significant damage to cognitive and emotional functions and brain mechanisms.[4]

Sleep-deprived people are able to fall asleep rapidly when allowed, but those with insomnia have difficulty falling asleep overall.[5]

The amount of sleep needed can depend on sleep quality, age, pregnancy, and level of sleep deprivation. Insufficient sleep has been linked to weight gain, high blood pressure, diabetes, depression, heart disease, and strokes.[6] Sleep deprivation can also lead to high anxiety, irritability, erratic behavior, poor cognitive functioning and performance, and psychotic episodes.[7]

A chronic sleep-restricted state adversely affects the brain and cognitive function.[8] However, in a subset of cases, sleep deprivation can paradoxically lead to increased energy and alertness; although its long-term consequences have never been evaluated, sleep deprivation has even been used as a treatment for depression.[9][10]

Few studies have compared the effects of acute total sleep deprivation and chronic partial sleep restriction.[8] A complete absence of sleep over a long period is not frequent in humans (unless they have fatal insomnia or specific issues caused by surgery); it appears that brief microsleeps cannot be avoided.[11] Long-term total sleep deprivation has caused death in lab animals.[12]

Causes edit

Insomnia edit

Insomnia, one of the six types of dyssomnia, affects 21–37% of the adult population.[13][14][15] Many of its symptoms are easily recognizable, including excessive daytime sleepiness; frustration or worry about sleep; problems with attention, concentration, or memory; extreme mood changes or irritability; lack of energy or motivation; poor performance at school or work; and tension headaches or stomach aches.

Insomnia can be grouped into primary and secondary, or comorbid, insomnia.[16][17][18]

Primary insomnia is a sleep disorder not attributable to a medical, psychiatric, or environmental cause.[19] There are three main types of primary insomnia. These include psychophysiological, idiopathic insomnia, and sleep state misperception (paradoxical insomnia).[16] Psychophysiological insomnia is anxiety-induced. Idiopathic insomnia generally begins in childhood and lasts for the rest of a person's life. It's suggested that idiopathic insomnia is a neurochemical problem in a part of the brain that controls the sleep-wake cycle, resulting in either under-active sleep signals or over-active wake signals. Sleep state misperception is diagnosed when people get enough sleep but inaccurately perceive that their sleep is insufficient.[20]

Secondary insomnia, or comorbid insomnia, occurs concurrently with other medical, neurological, psychological, and psychiatric conditions. Causation is not necessarily implied.[21] Causes can be from depression, anxiety, and personality disorders.[22]

Sleep deprivation is known to be cumulative. This means that the fatigue and sleep one lost as a result of, for example, staying awake all night, would be carried over to the following day.[23] Not getting enough sleep for a couple of days cumulatively builds up a deficiency and causes symptoms of sleep deprivation to appear. A well-rested and healthy individual will generally spend less time in the REM stage of sleep. Studies have shown an inverse relationship between time spent in the REM stage of sleep and subsequent wakefulness during waking hours.[24] Short-term insomnia can be induced by stress or when the body experiences changes in environment and regimen.[25]

Sleep apnea edit

Sleep apnea is a serious disorder that has symptoms of both insomnia and sleep deprivation, among other symptoms like excessive daytime sleepiness, abrupt awakenings, and difficulty concentrating.[26] Those with sleep apnea may experience symptoms such as awakening gasping or choking, restless sleep, morning headaches, morning confusion or irritability, and restlessness. This disorder affects 1 to 10 percent of Americans.[27] It has many serious health outcomes if left untreated. Positive airway pressure therapy using CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure), APAP, or BPAP devices is considered the first-line treatment option for sleep apnea.[28]

Central sleep apnea is caused by a failure of the central nervous system to signal the body to breathe during sleep. Treatments similar to obstructive sleep apnea may be used, as well as other treatments such as adaptive servo ventilation and certain medications. Some medications, such as opioids, may contribute to or cause central sleep apnea.[29]

Self-imposed edit

Sleep deprivation can sometimes be self-imposed due to a lack of desire to sleep or the habitual use of stimulant drugs.[30]

Revenge Bedtime Procrastination, which is a need to stay up late after a busy day to feel like the day is longer. Leading to sleep deprivation from staying up and wanting to make the day "seem/feel" longer. [30]

Caffeine edit

 
This diagram shows how caffeine affects the different areas of the body, both positively and negatively.

Consumption of caffeine in large quantities can have negative effects on one's sleep cycle.

While there are short-term performance benefits to caffeine consumption, overuse can lead to insomnia symptoms or worsen pre-existing insomnia.[31] Consuming caffeine to stay awake at night may lead to sleeplessness, anxiety, frequent nighttime awakenings, and overall poorer sleep quality.[32]

Mental illness edit

The specific causal relationships between sleep loss and effects on psychiatric disorders have been most extensively studied in patients with mood disorders.[33][medical citation needed] Shifts into mania in bipolar patients are often preceded by periods of insomnia,[34] and sleep deprivation has been shown to induce a manic state in about 30% of patients.[35] Sleep deprivation may represent a final common pathway in the genesis of mania,[36] and manic patients usually have a continuous reduced need for sleep.[37]

Chronic sleep problems affect 50% to 80% of patients in a typical psychiatric practice, compared with 10% to 18% of adults in the general U.S. population. Sleep problems are particularly common in patients with anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).[26]

The symptoms of sleep deprivation and those of schizophrenia are parallel, including those of positive and cognitive symptoms.[38]

School edit

The U.S. National Sleep Foundation cites a 1996 paper showing that college/university-aged students get an average of less than 6 hours of sleep each night.[39] A 2018 study highlights the need for a good night's sleep for students, finding that college students who averaged eight hours of sleep for the five nights of finals week scored higher on their final exams than those who did not.[40]

In the study, 70.6% of students reported obtaining less than 8 hours of sleep, and up to 27% of students may be at risk for at least one sleep disorder.[41] Sleep deprivation is common in first-year college students as they adjust to the stress and social activities of college life.

Estevan et al. studied the relationships between sleep and test performance. They found that students tend to sleep less than usual the night before an exam and that exam performance was positively correlated with sleep duration.[42]

A study performed by the Department of Psychology at the National Chung Cheng University in Taiwan concluded that freshmen received the least amount of sleep during the week.[43]

Studies of later start times in schools have consistently reported benefits to adolescent sleep, health, and learning using a wide variety of methodological approaches. In contrast, there are no studies showing that early start times have any positive impact on sleep, health, or learning.[44] Data from international studies demonstrate that "synchronized" start times for adolescents are far later than the start times in the overwhelming majority of educational institutions.[44] In 1997, University of Minnesota researchers compared students who started school at 7:15 a.m. with those who started at 8:40 a.m. They found that students who started at 8:40 got higher grades and more sleep on weekday nights than those who started earlier.[45] One in four U.S. high school students admits to falling asleep in class at least once a week.[46]

It is known that during human adolescence, circadian rhythms and, therefore, sleep patterns typically undergo marked changes. Electroencephalogram (EEG) studies indicate a 50% reduction in deep (stage 4) sleep and a 75% reduction in the peak amplitude of delta waves during NREM sleep in adolescence. School schedules are often incompatible with a corresponding delay in sleep offset, leading to a less than optimal amount of sleep for the majority of adolescents.[47]

Hospital stay edit

A study performed nationwide in the Netherlands found that general ward patients staying at the hospital experienced shorter total sleep (83 min. less), more night-time awakenings, and earlier awakenings compared to sleeping at home. Over 70% experienced being woken up by external causes, such as hospital staff (35.8%). Sleep-disturbing factors included the noise of other patients, medical devices, pain, and toilet visits.[48] Sleep deprivation is even more severe in ICU patients, where the naturally occurring nocturnal peak of melatonin secretion was found to be absent, possibly causing the disruption in the normal sleep-wake cycle.[49] However, as the personal characteristics and the clinical picture of hospital patients are so diverse, the possible solutions to improve sleep and circadian rhythmicity should be tailored to the individual and within the possibilities of the hospital ward. Multiple interventions could be considered to aid patient characteristics, improve hospital routines, or improve the hospital environment.[50]

The Internet edit

A study published in the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization found that broadband internet connection was associated with sleep deprivation. The study concluded that people with a broadband connection tend to sleep 25 minutes less than those without a broadband connection; hence, they are less likely to get the scientifically recommended 7–9 hours of sleep.[51] Another study conducted on 435 non-medical staff at King Saud University Medical City reported that 9 out of 10 of the respondents used their smartphones at bedtime, with social media being the most used service (80.5%). The study found participants who spent more than 60 minutes using their smartphones at bedtime were 7.4 times more likely to have poor sleep quality than participants who spent less than 15 minutes.[52] Overall, internet usage an hour before bedtime has been found to disrupt sleeping patterns.

Shift work edit

Many businesses are operational 24/7, such as airlines, hospitals, etc., where workers perform their duties in different shifts. Shift work patterns cause sleep deprivation and lead to poor concentration, detrimental health effects, and fatigue. Shift work remains an unspoken challenge within industries, often disregarded by both employers and employees alike, leading to an increase in occupational injuries. A worker experiencing fatigue poses a potential danger, not only to themselves, but also to others around them. Both employers and employees must acknowledge the risks associated with sleep deprivation and on-the-job fatigue to effectively mitigate the chances of occupational injuries.[53]

Effects and consequences edit

 
Main health effects of sleep deprivation

The brain edit

Temporary edit

One study suggested, based on neuroimaging, that 35 hours of total sleep deprivation in healthy controls negatively affected the brain's ability to put an emotional event into the proper perspective and make a controlled, suitable response to the event.[54]

According to the latest research, lack of sleep may cause more harm than previously thought and may lead to the permanent loss of brain cells.[55] The negative effects of sleep deprivation on alertness and cognitive performance suggest decreases in brain activity and function. These changes primarily occur in two regions: the thalamus, a structure involved in alertness and attention, and the prefrontal cortex, a region subserving alertness, attention, and higher-order cognitive processes.[56] This was the finding of an American study in 2000. Seventeen men in their 20s were tested. Sleep deprivation was progressive, with measurements of glucose (absolute regional CMRglu), cognitive performance, alertness, mood, and subjective experiences collected after 0, 24, 48, and 72 hours of sleep deprivation. Additional measures of alertness, cognitive performance, and mood were collected at fixed intervals. PET scans were used, and attention was paid to the circadian rhythm of cognitive performance.[56] Interestingly, the effects of sleep deprivation appear to be constant across "night owls" and "early birds", or different sleep chronotypes, as revealed by fMRI and graph theory.[57]

Lasting edit

 
REM sleep deprivation causes swollen mitochondria in neurons (caused by cytochrome c); noradrenaline receptor blockers keep their inner cristae intact.

Studies on rodents show that the response to neuronal injury due to acute sleep deprivation is adaptative before three hours of sleep loss per night and becomes maladaptative, and apoptosis occurs after.[58] Studies in mice show neuronal death (in the hippocampus, locus coeruleus, and medial PFC) occurs after two days of REM sleep deprivation. However, mice do not model well the effects in humans, because they sleep a third of the duration of REM sleep of humans and caspase-3, the main effector of apoptosis, kills three times the number of cells in humans than in mice.[59] Also not accounted for in nearly all of the studies is that acute REM sleep deprivation induces lasting (> 20 days) neuronal apoptosis in mice, and the apoptosis rate increases on the day following its end, so the amount of apoptosis is often undercounted in mice because experiments nearly always measure it the day the sleep deprivation ends.[60] For these reasons, both the time before cells degenerate and the extent of degeneration could be greatly underevaluated in humans.

Such histological studies cannot be performed on humans for ethical reasons, but long-term studies show that sleep quality is more associated with gray matter volume reduction[61] than age,[62] occurring in areas like the precuneus.[63]

 
Molecular pathway of REM sleep deprivation-induced apoptosis in neurons

Sleep is necessary to repair cellular damage caused by reactive oxygen species and DNA damage. During long-term sleep deprivation, cellular damage aggregates up to a tipping point that triggers cellular degeneration and apoptosis. REM sleep deprivation causes an increase in noradrenaline (which incidentally causes the person sleep deprived to be stressed) due to the neurons in the locus coeruleus producing it not ceasing to do so, which causes an increase in the activity of the Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase pump, which itself activates the intrinsic pathway of apoptosis[64] and prevents autophagy, which also induces the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis.

Sleep outside of the REM phase may allow enzymes to repair brain cell damage caused by free radicals. High metabolic activity while awake damages the enzymes themselves, preventing efficient repair. This study observed the first evidence of brain damage in rats as a direct result of sleep deprivation.[65]

Attention and working memory edit

Among the possible physical consequences of sleep deprivation, deficits in attention and working memory are perhaps the most important;[8] such lapses in mundane routines can lead to unfortunate results, from forgetting ingredients while cooking to missing a sentence while taking notes. Performing tasks that require attention appears to be correlated with the number of hours of sleep received each night, declining as a function of hours of sleep deprivation.[66] Working memory is tested by methods such as choice-reaction time tasks.[8]

Attentional lapses also extend into more critical domains in which the consequences can be life or death; car crashes and industrial disasters can result from inattentiveness attributable to sleep deprivation. To empirically measure the magnitude of attention deficits, researchers typically employ the psychomotor vigilance task (PVT), which requires the subject to press a button in response to a light at random intervals. Failure to press the button in response to the stimulus (light) is recorded as an error, attributable to the microsleeps that occur as a product of sleep deprivation.[67]

Crucially, individuals' subjective evaluations of their fatigue often do not predict actual performance on the PVT. While totally sleep-deprived individuals are usually aware of the degree of their impairment, lapses from chronic (lesser) sleep deprivation can build up over time so that they are equal in number and severity to the lapses occurring from total (acute) sleep deprivation. Chronically sleep-deprived people, however, continue to rate themselves considerably less impaired than totally sleep-deprived participants.[68] Since people usually evaluate their capability on tasks like driving subjectively, their evaluations may lead them to the false conclusion that they can perform tasks that require constant attention when their abilities are in fact impaired.[citation needed]

Mood edit

Sleep deprivation can have a negative impact on mood.[69] Staying up all night or taking an unexpected night shift can make one feel irritable. Once one catches up on sleep, one's mood will often return to baseline or normal. Even partial sleep deprivation can have a significant impact on mood. In one study, subjects reported increased sleepiness, fatigue, confusion, tension, and total mood disturbance, which all recovered to their baseline after one to two full nights of sleep.[70][71]

Depression and sleep are in a bidirectional relationship. Poor sleep can lead to the development of depression, and depression can cause insomnia, hypersomnia, or obstructive sleep apnea.[72][73] About 75% of adult patients with depression can present with insomnia.[74] Sleep deprivation, whether total or not, can induce significant anxiety, and longer sleep deprivations tend to result in an increased level of anxiety.[75]

Sleep deprivation has also shown some positive effects on mood and can be used to treat depression.[10] Chronotype can affect how sleep deprivation influences mood. Those with morningness (advanced sleep period or "lark") preference become more depressed after sleep deprivation, while those with eveningness (delayed sleep period or "owl") preference show an improvement in mood.[76]

Mood and mental states can affect sleep as well. Increased agitation and arousal from anxiety or stress can keep one more aroused, awake, and alert.[70]

Driving ability edit

The dangers of sleep deprivation are apparent on the road; the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) reports that one in every five serious motor vehicle injuries is related to driver fatigue, with 80,000 drivers falling asleep behind the wheel every day and 250,000 accidents every year related to sleep,[77] though the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration suggests the figure for traffic accidents may be closer to 100,000.[45] The AASM recommends pulling off the road and taking a 15- or 20-minute nap to alleviate drowsiness.[77]

According to a 2000 study published in the British Medical Journal, researchers in Australia and New Zealand reported that sleep deprivation can have some of the same hazardous effects as being drunk.[78] People who drove after being awake for 17–19 hours performed worse than those with a blood alcohol level of 0.05 percent, which is the legal limit for drunk driving in most western European countries and Australia. Another study suggested that performance begins to degrade after 16 hours awake, and 21 hours awake was equivalent to a blood alcohol content of 0.08 percent, which is the blood alcohol limit for drunk driving in Canada, the U.S., and the U.K.[79]

The fatigue of drivers of goods trucks and passenger vehicles has come to the attention of authorities in many countries, where specific laws have been introduced with the aim of reducing the risk of traffic accidents due to driver fatigue. Rules concerning minimum break lengths, maximum shift lengths, and minimum time between shifts are common in the driving regulations used in different countries and regions, such as the drivers' working hours regulations in the European Union and hours of service regulations in the United States.

The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill was the second largest oil spill in United States waters, after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. This accident occurred when an Exxon oil tanker struck a reef at Prince William Sound in Alaska. Approximately 10.8 million gallons of oil spilled into the sea. The accident caused great environmental damage, including the deaths of hundreds of thousands of birds and sea creatures. Fatigue and sleep deprivation were the major contributors to the accident. The captain of the ship was asleep after a night of heavy drinking; he was severely fatigued and had been awake for 18 hours. The entire crew was suffering from fatigue and inadequate sleep.[80]

Fatigue edit

Sleep deprivation and disruption is associated with subsequent fatigue. [81][82]

Sleep transition edit

Sleep propensity (SP) can be defined as the readiness to transition from wakefulness to sleep or the ability to stay asleep if already sleeping.[83] Sleep deprivation increases this propensity, which can be measured by polysomnography (PSG) as a reduction in sleep latency (the time needed to fall asleep).[84] An indicator of sleep propensity can also be seen in the shortening of the transition from light stages of non-REM sleep to deeper slow-wave oscillations.[84]

On average, the latency in healthy adults decreases by a few minutes after a night without sleep, and the latency from sleep onset to slow-wave sleep is halved.[84] Sleep latency is generally measured with the multiple sleep latency test (MSLT). In contrast, the maintenance of wakefulness test (MWT) also uses sleep latency, but this time as a measure of the capacity of the participants to stay awake (when asked to) instead of falling asleep.[84]

Sleep-wake cycle edit

People aged 18 to 64 need seven to nine hours of sleep per night.[85] Research studying sleep deprivation shows its impact on mood, cognitive, and motor functioning due to dysregulation of the sleep-wake cycle and augmented sleep propensity.[84] Multiple studies that identified the role of the hypothalamus and multiple neural systems controlling circadian rhythms and homeostasis have been helpful in understanding sleep deprivation better.[84][86] To describe the temporal course of the sleep-wake cycle, the two-process model of sleep regulation can be mentioned.[84]

This model proposes a homeostatic process (Process S) and a circadian process (Process C) that interact to define the time and intensity of sleep.[87] Process S represents the drive for sleep, increasing during wakefulness and decreasing during sleep until a defined threshold level, while Process C is the oscillator responsible for these levels. When being sleep deprived, homeostatic pressure accumulates to the point that waking functions will be degraded even at the highest circadian drive for wakefulness.[84][87]

Microsleeps edit

Microsleeps are periods of brief sleep that most frequently occur when a person has a significant level of sleep deprivation. Microsleeps usually last for a few seconds, usually no longer than 15 seconds,[88] and happen most frequently when a person is trying to stay awake when they are feeling sleepy.[89] The person usually falls into microsleep while doing a monotonous task like driving, reading a book, or staring at a computer.[90] Microsleeps are similar to blackouts, and a person experiencing them is not consciously aware that they are occurring.

An even lighter type of sleep has been seen in rats that have been kept awake for long periods of time. In a process known as local sleep, specific localized brain regions went into periods of short (~80 ms) but frequent (~40/min) NREM-like states. Despite the on-and-off periods where neurons shut off, the rats appeared to be awake, although they performed poorly at tests.[91]

Cardiovascular morbidity edit

Decreased sleep duration is associated with many adverse cardiovascular consequences.[92][93][94][95] The American Heart Association has stated that sleep restriction is a risk factor for adverse cardiometabolic profiles and outcomes. The organization recommends healthy sleep habits for ideal cardiac health, along with other well-known factors like blood pressure, cholesterol, diet, glucose, weight, smoking, and physical activity.[96] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has noted that adults who sleep less than seven hours per day are more likely to have chronic health conditions, including heart attack, coronary heart disease, and stroke, compared to those with an adequate amount of sleep.[97]

In a study that followed over 160,000 healthy, non-obese adults, the subjects who self-reported sleep duration less than six hours a day were at increased risk for developing multiple cardiometabolic risk factors. They presented with increased central obesity, elevated fasting glucose, hypertension, low high-density lipoprotein, hypertriglyceridemia, and metabolic syndrome. The presence or lack of insomnia symptoms did not modify the effects of sleep duration in this study.[98]

The United Kingdom Biobank studied nearly 500,000 adults who had no cardiovascular disease, and the subjects who slept less than six hours a day were associated with a 20 percent increase in the risk of developing myocardial infarction (MI) over a seven-year follow-up period. Interestingly, a long sleep duration of more than nine hours a night was also a risk factor.[99]

Immunosuppression edit

Among the myriad of health consequences that sleep deprivation can cause, disruption of the immune system is one of them. While it is not clearly understood, researchers believe that sleep is essential to providing sufficient energy for the immune system to work and allowing inflammation to take place during sleep. Also, just as sleep can reinforce memory in a person's brain, it can help consolidate the memory of the immune system, or adaptive immunity.[100][101]

Sleep quality is directly related to immunity levels. The team, led by Professor Cohen of Carnegie Mellon University in the United States, found that even a slight disturbance of sleep may affect the body's response to the cold virus. Those with better sleep quality had significantly higher blood T and B lymphocytes than those with poor sleep quality.These two lymphocytes are the main body of immune function in the human body.[102]

An adequate amount of sleep improves the effects of vaccines that utilize adaptive immunity. When vaccines expose the body to a weakened or deactivated antigen, the body initiates an immune response. The immune system learns to recognize that antigen and attacks it when exposed again in the future. Studies have found that people who don't sleep the night after getting a vaccine are less likely to develop a proper immune response to the vaccine and sometimes even require a second dose. [citation needed] People who are sleep deprived in general also do not provide their bodies with sufficient time for an adequate immunological memory to form and, thus, can fail to benefit from vaccination.[100]

People who sleep less than six hours a night are more susceptible to infection and are more likely to catch a cold or flu. A lack of sleep can also prolong the recovery time of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU).[100][103][104]

Weight gain edit

A lack of sleep can cause an imbalance in several hormones that are critical for weight gain. Sleep deprivation increases the level of ghrelin (hunger hormone) and decreases the level of leptin (fullness hormone), resulting in an increased feeling of hunger and a desire for high-calorie foods.[105][106] Sleep loss is also associated with decreased growth hormone and elevated cortisol levels, which are connected to obesity. People who do not get sufficient sleep can also feel sleepy and fatigued during the day and get less exercise. Obesity can cause poor sleep quality as well. Individuals who are overweight or obese can experience obstructive sleep apnea, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), depression, asthma, and osteoarthritis, all of which can disrupt a good night's sleep.[107]

In rats, prolonged, complete sleep deprivation increased both food intake and energy expenditure, with a net effect of weight loss and ultimately death.[108] This study hypothesizes that the moderate chronic sleep debt associated with habitual short sleep is associated with increased appetite and energy expenditure, with the equation tipped towards food intake rather than expenditure in societies where high-calorie food is freely available.[106]

Type 2 diabetes edit

It has been suggested that people experiencing short-term sleep restrictions process glucose more slowly than individuals receiving a full 8 hours of sleep, increasing the likelihood of developing type 2 diabetes.[109] Poor sleep quality is linked to high blood sugar levels in diabetic and prediabetic patients, but the causal relationship is not clearly understood. Researchers suspect that sleep deprivation affects insulin, cortisol, and oxidative stress, which subsequently influence blood sugar levels. Sleep deprivation can increase the level of ghrelin and decrease the level of leptin. People who get insufficient amounts of sleep are more likely to crave food in order to compensate for the lack of energy. This habit can raise blood sugar and put them at risk of obesity and diabetes.[110]

In 2005, a study of over 1400 participants showed that participants who habitually slept fewer hours were more likely to have associations with type 2 diabetes.[111] However, because this study was merely correlational, the direction of cause and effect between little sleep and diabetes is uncertain. The authors point to an earlier study that showed that experimental rather than habitual restriction of sleep resulted in impaired glucose tolerance (IGT).[112]

Other effects edit

The National Sleep Foundation identifies several warning signs that a driver is dangerously fatigued. These include rolling down the window, turning up the radio, having trouble keeping eyes open, head-nodding, drifting out of their lane, and daydreaming. At particular risk are lone drivers between midnight and 6:00 a.m.[113]

Sleep deprivation can negatively impact overall performance and has led to major fatal accidents. Due largely to the February 2009 crash of Colgan Air Flight 3407, which killed 50 people and was partially attributed to pilot fatigue, the FAA reviewed its procedures to ensure that pilots are sufficiently rested. Air traffic controllers were under scrutiny when, in 2010, there were 10 incidents of controllers falling asleep while on shift. The common practice of turn-around shifts caused sleep deprivation and was a contributing factor to all air traffic control incidents. The FAA reviewed its practices for shift changes, and the findings showed that controllers were not well rested.[114] A 2004 study also found medical residents with less than four hours of sleep a night made more than twice as many errors as the 11% of surveyed residents who slept for more than seven hours a night.[115]

Twenty-four hours of continuous sleep deprivation results in the choice of less difficult math tasks without a decrease in subjective reports of effort applied to the task.[citation needed] Naturally occurring sleep loss affects the choice of everyday tasks, such that low-effort tasks are mostly commonly selected.[citation needed] Adolescents who experience less sleep show a decreased willingness to engage in sports activities that require effort through fine motor coordination and attention to detail.[116][117]

Great sleep deprivation mimics psychosis: distorted perceptions can lead to inappropriate emotional and behavioral responses.[118]

Astronauts have reported performance errors and decreased cognitive ability during periods of extended working hours and wakefulness, as well as sleep loss caused by circadian rhythm disruption and environmental factors.[119]

One study has found that a single night of sleep deprivation may cause tachycardia, a condition in which the heartrate exceeds 100 beats per minute (in the following day).[120][121]

Generally, sleep deprivation may facilitate or intensify:[122]

Sleep deprivation may cause symptoms similar to:

A 2009 review found that sleep loss had a wide range of cognitive and neurobehavioral effects including unstable attention, slowing of response times, decline of memory performance, reduced learning of cognitive tasks, deterioration of performance in tasks requiring divergent thinking, perseveration with ineffective solutions, performance deterioration as task duration increases; and growing neglect of activities judged to be nonessential.[138]

Assessment edit

Patients with sleep deprivation may present with complaints of symptoms and signs of insufficient sleep, such as fatigue, sleepiness, drowsy driving, and cognitive difficulties. Sleep insufficiency can easily go unrecognized and undiagnosed unless patients are specifically asked about it by their clinicians.[139]

Several questions are critical in evaluating sleep duration and quality, as well as the cause of sleep deprivation. Sleep patterns (typical bed time or rise time on weekdays and weekends), shift work, and frequency of naps can reveal the direct cause of poor sleep, and quality of sleep should be discussed to rule out any diseases such as obstructive sleep apnea and restless leg syndrome.[139]

Sleep diaries are useful in providing detailed information about sleep patterns. They are inexpensive, readily available, and easy to use. The diaries can be as simple as a 24-hour log to note the time of being asleep or can be detailed to include other relevant information.[140][141] Sleep questionnaires such as the Sleep Timing Questionnaire (STQ) can be used instead of sleep diaries if there is any concern for patient adherence.[142]

Actigraphy is a useful, objective wrist-worn tool if the validity of self-reported sleep diaries or questionnaires is questionable. Actigraphy works by recording movements and using computerized algorithms to estimate total sleep time, sleep onset latency, the amount of wake after sleep onset, and sleep efficiency. Some devices have light sensors to detect light exposure.[143][144][145][146]

Management edit

Although there are numerous causes of sleep deprivation, there are some fundamental measures that promote quality sleep, as suggested by organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institute of Health, the National Institute of Aging, and the American Academy of Family Physicians. Historically, sleep hygiene, as first medically defined by Hauri in 1977,[147] was the standard for promoting healthy sleep habits, but evidence that has emerged since the 2010s suggests they are ineffective, both for people with insomnia[148] and for people without.[147] The key is to implement healthier sleep habits, also known as sleep hygiene.[149] Sleep hygiene recommendations include setting a fixed sleep schedule, taking naps with caution, maintaining a sleep environment that promotes sleep (cool temperature, limited exposure to light and noise, comfortable mattresses and pillows), exercising daily, avoiding alcohol, cigarettes, caffeine, and heavy meals in the evening, winding down and avoiding electronic use or physical activities close to bedtime, and getting out of bed if unable to fall asleep.[150]

For long-term involuntary sleep deprivation, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-i) is recommended as a first-line treatment after the exclusion of a physical diagnosis (e.g., sleep apnea).[148] CBT-i contains five different components: cognitive therapy, stimulus control, sleep restriction, sleep hygiene, and relaxation. As this approach has minimal adverse effects and long-term benefits, it is often preferred to (chronic) drug therapy.[151]

There are several strategies that help increase alertness and counteract the effects of sleep deprivation. Caffeine is often used over short periods to boost wakefulness when acute sleep deprivation is experienced; however, caffeine is less effective if taken routinely.[152] Other strategies recommended by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine include prophylactic sleep before deprivation, naps, other stimulants, and combinations thereof. However, the only sure and safe way to combat sleep deprivation is to increase nightly sleep time.[153]

Uses edit

To facilitate abusive control edit

Sleep deprivation can be used to disorient abuse victims to help set them up for abusive control.[154][155]

Interrogation edit

Sleep deprivation can be used as a means of interrogation, which has resulted in court trials over whether or not the technique is a form of torture.[156]

Under one interrogation technique, a subject might be kept awake for several days and, when finally allowed to fall asleep, suddenly awakened and questioned. Menachem Begin, the Prime Minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983, described his experience of sleep deprivation as a prisoner of the NKVD in the Soviet Union as follows:

In the head of the interrogated prisoner, a haze begins to form. His spirit is wearied to death, his legs are unsteady, and he has one sole desire: to sleep... Anyone who has experienced this desire knows that not even hunger and thirst are comparable with it.[157]

Sleep deprivation was one of the five techniques used by the British government in the 1970s. The European Court of Human Rights ruled that the five techniques "did not occasion suffering of the particular intensity and cruelty implied by the word torture ... [but] amounted to a practice of inhuman and degrading treatment", in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights.[158]

The United States Justice Department released four memos in August 2002 describing interrogation techniques used by the Central Intelligence Agency. They first described 10 techniques used in the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah, described as a terrorist logistics specialist, including sleep deprivation. Memos signed by Steven G. Bradbury in May 2005 claimed that forced sleep deprivation for up to 180 hours (7+12 days)[159][160] by shackling a diapered prisoner to the ceiling did not constitute torture,[161] nor did the combination of multiple interrogation methods (including sleep deprivation) constitute torture under United States law.[162][163] These memoranda were repudiated and withdrawn during the first months of the Obama administration.[159]

The question of the extreme use of sleep deprivation as torture has advocates on both sides of the issue. In 2006, Australian Federal Attorney-General Philip Ruddock argued that sleep deprivation does not constitute torture.[164] Nicole Bieske, a spokeswoman for Amnesty International Australia, has stated the opinion of her organization as follows: "At the very least, sleep deprivation is cruel, inhumane and degrading. If used for prolonged periods of time it is torture."[165]

Treating depression edit

Studies show that sleep restriction has some potential for treating depression.[10] Those with depression tend to have earlier occurrences of REM sleep with an increased number of rapid eye movements; therefore, monitoring patients' EEG and awakening them during occurrences of REM sleep appear to have a therapeutic effect, alleviating depressive symptoms.[166] This kind of treatment is known as wake therapy. Although as many as 60% of patients show an immediate recovery when sleep-deprived, most patients relapse the following night. The effect has been shown to be linked to an increase in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF).[167] A comprehensive evaluation of the human metabolome in sleep deprivation in 2014 found that 27 metabolites are increased after 24 waking hours and suggested serotonin, tryptophan, and taurine may contribute to the antidepressive effect.[168]

The incidence of relapse can be decreased by combining sleep deprivation with medication or a combination of light therapy and phase advance (going to bed substantially earlier than one's normal time).[169][170] Many tricyclic antidepressants suppress REM sleep, providing additional evidence for a link between mood and sleep.[171] Similarly, tranylcypromine has been shown to completely suppress REM sleep at adequate doses.

Treating insomnia edit

Sleep deprivation can be implemented for a short period of time in the treatment of insomnia. Some common sleep disorders have been shown to respond to cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia is a multicomponent process that is composed of stimulus control therapy, sleep restriction therapy (SRT), and sleep hygiene therapy.[172] One of the components is a controlled regime of "sleep restriction" in order to restore the homeostatic drive to sleep and encourage normal "sleep efficiency".[173] Stimulus control therapy is intended to limit behaviors intended to condition the body to sleep while in bed.[172] The main goal of stimulus control and sleep restriction therapy is to create an association between bed and sleep. Although sleep restriction therapy shows efficacy when applied as an element of cognitive-behavioral therapy, its efficacy is yet to be proven when used alone.[173][151] Sleep hygiene therapy is intended to help patients develop and maintain good sleeping habits. Sleep hygiene therapy is not helpful, however, when used as a monotherapy without the pairing of stimulus control therapy and sleep restriction therapy.[172][148] Light stimulation affects the supraoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus, controlling circadian rhythm and inhibiting the secretion of melatonin from the pineal gland. Light therapy can improve sleep quality, improve sleep efficiency, and extend sleep duration by helping to establish and consolidate regular sleep-wake cycles. Light therapy is a natural, simple, low-cost treatment that does not lead to residual effects or tolerance. Adverse reactions include headaches and eye fatigue and can also induce mania.[174]

In addition to the cognitive behavioral treatment of insomnia, there are also generally four approaches to treating insomnia medically. These are through the use of barbiturates, benzodiazepines, and benzodiazepine receptor agonists. Barbiturates are not considered to be a primary source of treatment due to the fact that they have a low therapeutic index, while melatonin agonists are shown to have a higher therapeutic index.[172]

Military training edit

Sleep deprivation has become hardwired into the military culture. It is prevalent in the entire force and especially severe for servicemembers deployed in high-conflict environments.[175][176]

Sleep deprivation has been used by the military in training programs to prepare personnel for combat experiences when proper sleep schedules aren't realistic. Sleep deprivation is used to create a different schedule pattern that is beyond a typical 24-hour day. Sleep deprivation is pivotal in training games such as "Keep in Memory" exercises, where personnel practice memorizing everything they can while under intense stress physically and mentally and being able to describe in as much detail as they can remember of what they remember seeing days later. Sleep deprivation is used in training to create soldiers who are used to only going off of a few hours or minutes of sleep randomly when available.[citation needed]

DARPA initiated sleep research to create a highly resilient soldier capable of sustaining extremely prolonged wakefulness, inspired by the white-crowned sparrow's week-long sleeplessness during migration, at a time when it was not understood that migration birds actually slept with half of their brain. This pursuit aimed both to produce a "super soldier" able "to go for a minimum of seven days without sleep, and in the longer term perhaps at least double that time frame, while preserving high levels of mental and physical performance", and to enhance productivity in sleep-deprived personnel. Military experiments on sleep have been conducted on combatants and prisoners, such as those in Guantánamo, where controlled lighting is combined with torture techniques to manipulate sensory experiences. Crary highlights how constant illumination and the removal of day-night distinctions create what he defines as a "time of indifference," utilizing light management as a form of psychological control.[177][178]

However, studies have since evaluated the impact of the sleep deprivation imprint on the military culture. Personnel surveys reveal common challenges such as inadequate sleep, fatigue, and impaired daytime functioning, impacting operational effectiveness and post-deployment reintegration. These sleep issues elevate the risk of severe mental health disorders, including PTSD and depression. Early intervention is crucial. Though promising, implementing cognitive-behavioral and imagery-rehearsal therapies for insomnia remains a challenge. Several high-profile military accidents caused in part or fully by sleep deprivation of personnel have been documented. The military has prioritized sleep education, with recent Army guidelines equating sleep importance to nutrition and exercise. The Navy, particularly influenced by retired Captain John Cordle, has actively experimented with watch schedules to align shipboard life with sailors' circadian needs, leading to improved sleep patterns, especially in submarines, supported by ongoing research efforts at the Naval Postgraduate School. Watch schedules with longer and more reliable resting intervals are nowadays the norm on U.S. submarines and a recommended option for surface ships.[175][176]

In addition to sleep deprivation, circadian misalignment, as commonly experienced by submarine crews, causes several long-term health issues and a decrease in cognitive performance.[179]

Changes in American sleep habits edit

National Geographic Magazine has reported that the demands of work, social activities, and the availability of 24-hour home entertainment and Internet access have caused people to sleep less now than in premodern times.[180] USA Today reported in 2007 that most adults in the USA get about an hour less than the average sleep time 40 years ago.[181]

Other researchers have questioned these claims. A 2004 editorial in the journal Sleep stated that, according to the available data, the average number of hours of sleep in a 24-hour period has not changed significantly in recent decades among adults. Furthermore, the editorial suggests that there is a range of normal sleep time required by healthy adults, and many indicators used to suggest chronic sleepiness among the population as a whole do not stand up to scientific scrutiny.[182]

A comparison of data collected from the Bureau of Labor Statistics' American Time Use Survey from 1965 to 1985 and 1998–2001 has been used to show that the median amount of sleep, napping, and resting done by the average adult American has changed by less than 0.7%, from a median of 482 minutes per day from 1965 through 1985 to 479 minutes per day from 1998 through 2001.[183][184]

Longest periods without sleep edit

Randy Gardner holds the scientifically documented record for the longest period of time a human being has intentionally gone without sleep not using stimulants of any kind. Gardner stayed awake for 264 hours (11 days), breaking the previous record of 260 hours held by Tom Rounds of Honolulu.[118] Lieutenant Commander John J. Ross of the U.S. Navy Medical Neuropsychiatric Research Unit later published an account of this event, which became well known among sleep-deprivation researchers.[118][185][186]

The Guinness World Record stands at 449 hours (18 days, 17 hours), held by Maureen Weston of Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, in April 1977, in a rocking-chair marathon.[185]

Claims of total sleep deprivation lasting years have been made several times,[187][188][189] but none are scientifically verified.[190] Claims of partial sleep deprivation are better documented. For example, Rhett Lamb of St. Petersburg, Florida, was initially reported to not sleep at all but actually had a rare condition permitting him to sleep only one to two hours per day in the first three years of his life. He had a rare abnormality called an Arnold–Chiari malformation, where brain tissue protrudes into the spinal canal and the skull puts pressure on the protruding part of the brain. The boy was operated on at All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg in May 2008. Two days after surgery, he slept through the night.[191][192]

French sleep expert Michel Jouvet and his team reported the case of a patient who was quasi-sleep-deprived for four months, as confirmed by repeated polygraphic recordings showing less than 30 minutes (of stage-1 sleep) per night, a condition they named "agrypnia". The 27-year-old man had Morvan's fibrillary chorea, a rare disease that leads to involuntary movements, and in this particular case, extreme insomnia. The researchers found that treatment with 5-HTP restored almost normal sleep stages. However, some months after this recovery, the patient died during a relapse that was unresponsive to 5-HTP. The cause of death was pulmonary edema. Despite the extreme insomnia, psychological investigation showed no sign of cognitive deficits, except for some hallucinations.[193]

Fatal insomnia is a neurodegenerative disease that eventually results in a complete inability to go past stage 1 of NREM sleep. In addition to insomnia, patients may experience panic attacks, paranoia, phobias, hallucinations, rapid weight loss, and dementia. Death usually occurs between 7 and 36 months from onset.

See also edit

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sleep, deprivation, confused, with, insomnia, also, known, sleep, insufficiency, sleeplessness, condition, having, adequate, duration, quality, sleep, support, decent, alertness, performance, health, either, chronic, acute, vary, widely, severity, known, anima. Not to be confused with Insomnia Sleep deprivation also known as sleep insufficiency 2 or sleeplessness is the condition of not having adequate duration and or quality of sleep to support decent alertness performance and health It can be either chronic or acute and may vary widely in severity All known animals sleep or exhibit some form of sleep behavior and the importance of sleep is self evident for humans as nearly a third of a person s life is spent sleeping 2 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention s CDC recommendations for the amount of sleep needed decrease with age 1 While sleep quantity is important good sleep quality is also essential to avoid sleep disorders 1 Sleep deprivationSpecialtySleep medicineSymptomsFatigue eye bags poor memory irritable mood weight gainComplicationsCar and work accidents weight gain cardiovascular diseaseCausesInsomnia sleep apnea stimulants caffeine amphetamine voluntary imposition school work mood disordersTreatmentCognitive behavioral therapy caffeine to induce alertness sleeping pills The average adult needs to sleep for 7 to 8 hours every 24 hours and sleep deprivation can occur if they do not get enough sleep 3 Acute sleep deprivation is when a person sleeps less than usual or does not sleep at all for a short period of time normally lasting one to two days but tends to follow the sleepless pattern for longer with no outside factors in play Chronic sleep deprivation is when a person routinely sleeps less than an optimal amount for optimal functioning Chronic sleep deficiency is often confused with the term insomnia citation needed Although both chronic sleep deficiency and insomnia share decreased quantity and or quality of sleep as well as impaired function their difference lies in the ability to fall asleep To date most sleep deprivation studies have focused on acute sleep deprivation suggesting that acute sleep deprivation can cause significant damage to cognitive and emotional functions and brain mechanisms 4 Sleep deprived people are able to fall asleep rapidly when allowed but those with insomnia have difficulty falling asleep overall 5 The amount of sleep needed can depend on sleep quality age pregnancy and level of sleep deprivation Insufficient sleep has been linked to weight gain high blood pressure diabetes depression heart disease and strokes 6 Sleep deprivation can also lead to high anxiety irritability erratic behavior poor cognitive functioning and performance and psychotic episodes 7 A chronic sleep restricted state adversely affects the brain and cognitive function 8 However in a subset of cases sleep deprivation can paradoxically lead to increased energy and alertness although its long term consequences have never been evaluated sleep deprivation has even been used as a treatment for depression 9 10 Few studies have compared the effects of acute total sleep deprivation and chronic partial sleep restriction 8 A complete absence of sleep over a long period is not frequent in humans unless they have fatal insomnia or specific issues caused by surgery it appears that brief microsleeps cannot be avoided 11 Long term total sleep deprivation has caused death in lab animals 12 Contents 1 Causes 1 1 Insomnia 1 2 Sleep apnea 1 3 Self imposed 1 3 1 Caffeine 1 4 Mental illness 1 5 School 1 6 Hospital stay 1 7 The Internet 1 8 Shift work 2 Effects and consequences 2 1 The brain 2 1 1 Temporary 2 1 2 Lasting 2 2 Attention and working memory 2 3 Mood 2 4 Driving ability 2 5 Fatigue 2 6 Sleep transition 2 7 Sleep wake cycle 2 8 Microsleeps 2 9 Cardiovascular morbidity 2 10 Immunosuppression 2 11 Weight gain 2 12 Type 2 diabetes 2 13 Other effects 3 Assessment 4 Management 5 Uses 5 1 To facilitate abusive control 5 2 Interrogation 5 3 Treating depression 5 4 Treating insomnia 5 5 Military training 6 Changes in American sleep habits 7 Longest periods without sleep 8 See also 9 ReferencesCauses editInsomnia edit Main article Insomnia Insomnia one of the six types of dyssomnia affects 21 37 of the adult population 13 14 15 Many of its symptoms are easily recognizable including excessive daytime sleepiness frustration or worry about sleep problems with attention concentration or memory extreme mood changes or irritability lack of energy or motivation poor performance at school or work and tension headaches or stomach aches Insomnia can be grouped into primary and secondary or comorbid insomnia 16 17 18 Primary insomnia is a sleep disorder not attributable to a medical psychiatric or environmental cause 19 There are three main types of primary insomnia These include psychophysiological idiopathic insomnia and sleep state misperception paradoxical insomnia 16 Psychophysiological insomnia is anxiety induced Idiopathic insomnia generally begins in childhood and lasts for the rest of a person s life It s suggested that idiopathic insomnia is a neurochemical problem in a part of the brain that controls the sleep wake cycle resulting in either under active sleep signals or over active wake signals Sleep state misperception is diagnosed when people get enough sleep but inaccurately perceive that their sleep is insufficient 20 Secondary insomnia or comorbid insomnia occurs concurrently with other medical neurological psychological and psychiatric conditions Causation is not necessarily implied 21 Causes can be from depression anxiety and personality disorders 22 Sleep deprivation is known to be cumulative This means that the fatigue and sleep one lost as a result of for example staying awake all night would be carried over to the following day 23 Not getting enough sleep for a couple of days cumulatively builds up a deficiency and causes symptoms of sleep deprivation to appear A well rested and healthy individual will generally spend less time in the REM stage of sleep Studies have shown an inverse relationship between time spent in the REM stage of sleep and subsequent wakefulness during waking hours 24 Short term insomnia can be induced by stress or when the body experiences changes in environment and regimen 25 Sleep apnea edit Main article Sleep apnea Sleep apnea is a serious disorder that has symptoms of both insomnia and sleep deprivation among other symptoms like excessive daytime sleepiness abrupt awakenings and difficulty concentrating 26 Those with sleep apnea may experience symptoms such as awakening gasping or choking restless sleep morning headaches morning confusion or irritability and restlessness This disorder affects 1 to 10 percent of Americans 27 It has many serious health outcomes if left untreated Positive airway pressure therapy using CPAP continuous positive airway pressure APAP or BPAP devices is considered the first line treatment option for sleep apnea 28 Central sleep apnea is caused by a failure of the central nervous system to signal the body to breathe during sleep Treatments similar to obstructive sleep apnea may be used as well as other treatments such as adaptive servo ventilation and certain medications Some medications such as opioids may contribute to or cause central sleep apnea 29 Self imposed edit Sleep deprivation can sometimes be self imposed due to a lack of desire to sleep or the habitual use of stimulant drugs 30 Revenge Bedtime Procrastination which is a need to stay up late after a busy day to feel like the day is longer Leading to sleep deprivation from staying up and wanting to make the day seem feel longer 30 Caffeine edit nbsp This diagram shows how caffeine affects the different areas of the body both positively and negatively Consumption of caffeine in large quantities can have negative effects on one s sleep cycle While there are short term performance benefits to caffeine consumption overuse can lead to insomnia symptoms or worsen pre existing insomnia 31 Consuming caffeine to stay awake at night may lead to sleeplessness anxiety frequent nighttime awakenings and overall poorer sleep quality 32 Mental illness edit The specific causal relationships between sleep loss and effects on psychiatric disorders have been most extensively studied in patients with mood disorders 33 medical citation needed Shifts into mania in bipolar patients are often preceded by periods of insomnia 34 and sleep deprivation has been shown to induce a manic state in about 30 of patients 35 Sleep deprivation may represent a final common pathway in the genesis of mania 36 and manic patients usually have a continuous reduced need for sleep 37 Chronic sleep problems affect 50 to 80 of patients in a typical psychiatric practice compared with 10 to 18 of adults in the general U S population Sleep problems are particularly common in patients with anxiety depression bipolar disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD 26 The symptoms of sleep deprivation and those of schizophrenia are parallel including those of positive and cognitive symptoms 38 School edit See also Sleep deprivation in higher education The U S National Sleep Foundation cites a 1996 paper showing that college university aged students get an average of less than 6 hours of sleep each night 39 A 2018 study highlights the need for a good night s sleep for students finding that college students who averaged eight hours of sleep for the five nights of finals week scored higher on their final exams than those who did not 40 In the study 70 6 of students reported obtaining less than 8 hours of sleep and up to 27 of students may be at risk for at least one sleep disorder 41 Sleep deprivation is common in first year college students as they adjust to the stress and social activities of college life Estevan et al studied the relationships between sleep and test performance They found that students tend to sleep less than usual the night before an exam and that exam performance was positively correlated with sleep duration 42 A study performed by the Department of Psychology at the National Chung Cheng University in Taiwan concluded that freshmen received the least amount of sleep during the week 43 Studies of later start times in schools have consistently reported benefits to adolescent sleep health and learning using a wide variety of methodological approaches In contrast there are no studies showing that early start times have any positive impact on sleep health or learning 44 Data from international studies demonstrate that synchronized start times for adolescents are far later than the start times in the overwhelming majority of educational institutions 44 In 1997 University of Minnesota researchers compared students who started school at 7 15 a m with those who started at 8 40 a m They found that students who started at 8 40 got higher grades and more sleep on weekday nights than those who started earlier 45 One in four U S high school students admits to falling asleep in class at least once a week 46 It is known that during human adolescence circadian rhythms and therefore sleep patterns typically undergo marked changes Electroencephalogram EEG studies indicate a 50 reduction in deep stage 4 sleep and a 75 reduction in the peak amplitude of delta waves during NREM sleep in adolescence School schedules are often incompatible with a corresponding delay in sleep offset leading to a less than optimal amount of sleep for the majority of adolescents 47 Hospital stay edit A study performed nationwide in the Netherlands found that general ward patients staying at the hospital experienced shorter total sleep 83 min less more night time awakenings and earlier awakenings compared to sleeping at home Over 70 experienced being woken up by external causes such as hospital staff 35 8 Sleep disturbing factors included the noise of other patients medical devices pain and toilet visits 48 Sleep deprivation is even more severe in ICU patients where the naturally occurring nocturnal peak of melatonin secretion was found to be absent possibly causing the disruption in the normal sleep wake cycle 49 However as the personal characteristics and the clinical picture of hospital patients are so diverse the possible solutions to improve sleep and circadian rhythmicity should be tailored to the individual and within the possibilities of the hospital ward Multiple interventions could be considered to aid patient characteristics improve hospital routines or improve the hospital environment 50 The Internet edit A study published in the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization found that broadband internet connection was associated with sleep deprivation The study concluded that people with a broadband connection tend to sleep 25 minutes less than those without a broadband connection hence they are less likely to get the scientifically recommended 7 9 hours of sleep 51 Another study conducted on 435 non medical staff at King Saud University Medical City reported that 9 out of 10 of the respondents used their smartphones at bedtime with social media being the most used service 80 5 The study found participants who spent more than 60 minutes using their smartphones at bedtime were 7 4 times more likely to have poor sleep quality than participants who spent less than 15 minutes 52 Overall internet usage an hour before bedtime has been found to disrupt sleeping patterns Shift work edit Many businesses are operational 24 7 such as airlines hospitals etc where workers perform their duties in different shifts Shift work patterns cause sleep deprivation and lead to poor concentration detrimental health effects and fatigue Shift work remains an unspoken challenge within industries often disregarded by both employers and employees alike leading to an increase in occupational injuries A worker experiencing fatigue poses a potential danger not only to themselves but also to others around them Both employers and employees must acknowledge the risks associated with sleep deprivation and on the job fatigue to effectively mitigate the chances of occupational injuries 53 Effects and consequences edit nbsp Main health effects of sleep deprivation The brain edit Temporary edit One study suggested based on neuroimaging that 35 hours of total sleep deprivation in healthy controls negatively affected the brain s ability to put an emotional event into the proper perspective and make a controlled suitable response to the event 54 According to the latest research lack of sleep may cause more harm than previously thought and may lead to the permanent loss of brain cells 55 The negative effects of sleep deprivation on alertness and cognitive performance suggest decreases in brain activity and function These changes primarily occur in two regions the thalamus a structure involved in alertness and attention and the prefrontal cortex a region subserving alertness attention and higher order cognitive processes 56 This was the finding of an American study in 2000 Seventeen men in their 20s were tested Sleep deprivation was progressive with measurements of glucose absolute regional CMRglu cognitive performance alertness mood and subjective experiences collected after 0 24 48 and 72 hours of sleep deprivation Additional measures of alertness cognitive performance and mood were collected at fixed intervals PET scans were used and attention was paid to the circadian rhythm of cognitive performance 56 Interestingly the effects of sleep deprivation appear to be constant across night owls and early birds or different sleep chronotypes as revealed by fMRI and graph theory 57 Lasting edit nbsp REM sleep deprivation causes swollen mitochondria in neurons caused by cytochrome c noradrenaline receptor blockers keep their inner cristae intact Studies on rodents show that the response to neuronal injury due to acute sleep deprivation is adaptative before three hours of sleep loss per night and becomes maladaptative and apoptosis occurs after 58 Studies in mice show neuronal death in the hippocampus locus coeruleus and medial PFC occurs after two days of REM sleep deprivation However mice do not model well the effects in humans because they sleep a third of the duration of REM sleep of humans and caspase 3 the main effector of apoptosis kills three times the number of cells in humans than in mice 59 Also not accounted for in nearly all of the studies is that acute REM sleep deprivation induces lasting gt 20 days neuronal apoptosis in mice and the apoptosis rate increases on the day following its end so the amount of apoptosis is often undercounted in mice because experiments nearly always measure it the day the sleep deprivation ends 60 For these reasons both the time before cells degenerate and the extent of degeneration could be greatly underevaluated in humans Such histological studies cannot be performed on humans for ethical reasons but long term studies show that sleep quality is more associated with gray matter volume reduction 61 than age 62 occurring in areas like the precuneus 63 nbsp Molecular pathway of REM sleep deprivation induced apoptosis in neurons Sleep is necessary to repair cellular damage caused by reactive oxygen species and DNA damage During long term sleep deprivation cellular damage aggregates up to a tipping point that triggers cellular degeneration and apoptosis REM sleep deprivation causes an increase in noradrenaline which incidentally causes the person sleep deprived to be stressed due to the neurons in the locus coeruleus producing it not ceasing to do so which causes an increase in the activity of the Na K ATPase pump which itself activates the intrinsic pathway of apoptosis 64 and prevents autophagy which also induces the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis Sleep outside of the REM phase may allow enzymes to repair brain cell damage caused by free radicals High metabolic activity while awake damages the enzymes themselves preventing efficient repair This study observed the first evidence of brain damage in rats as a direct result of sleep deprivation 65 Attention and working memory edit Among the possible physical consequences of sleep deprivation deficits in attention and working memory are perhaps the most important 8 such lapses in mundane routines can lead to unfortunate results from forgetting ingredients while cooking to missing a sentence while taking notes Performing tasks that require attention appears to be correlated with the number of hours of sleep received each night declining as a function of hours of sleep deprivation 66 Working memory is tested by methods such as choice reaction time tasks 8 Attentional lapses also extend into more critical domains in which the consequences can be life or death car crashes and industrial disasters can result from inattentiveness attributable to sleep deprivation To empirically measure the magnitude of attention deficits researchers typically employ the psychomotor vigilance task PVT which requires the subject to press a button in response to a light at random intervals Failure to press the button in response to the stimulus light is recorded as an error attributable to the microsleeps that occur as a product of sleep deprivation 67 Crucially individuals subjective evaluations of their fatigue often do not predict actual performance on the PVT While totally sleep deprived individuals are usually aware of the degree of their impairment lapses from chronic lesser sleep deprivation can build up over time so that they are equal in number and severity to the lapses occurring from total acute sleep deprivation Chronically sleep deprived people however continue to rate themselves considerably less impaired than totally sleep deprived participants 68 Since people usually evaluate their capability on tasks like driving subjectively their evaluations may lead them to the false conclusion that they can perform tasks that require constant attention when their abilities are in fact impaired citation needed Mood edit Sleep deprivation can have a negative impact on mood 69 Staying up all night or taking an unexpected night shift can make one feel irritable Once one catches up on sleep one s mood will often return to baseline or normal Even partial sleep deprivation can have a significant impact on mood In one study subjects reported increased sleepiness fatigue confusion tension and total mood disturbance which all recovered to their baseline after one to two full nights of sleep 70 71 Depression and sleep are in a bidirectional relationship Poor sleep can lead to the development of depression and depression can cause insomnia hypersomnia or obstructive sleep apnea 72 73 About 75 of adult patients with depression can present with insomnia 74 Sleep deprivation whether total or not can induce significant anxiety and longer sleep deprivations tend to result in an increased level of anxiety 75 Sleep deprivation has also shown some positive effects on mood and can be used to treat depression 10 Chronotype can affect how sleep deprivation influences mood Those with morningness advanced sleep period or lark preference become more depressed after sleep deprivation while those with eveningness delayed sleep period or owl preference show an improvement in mood 76 Mood and mental states can affect sleep as well Increased agitation and arousal from anxiety or stress can keep one more aroused awake and alert 70 Driving ability edit Main article Sleep deprived driving The dangers of sleep deprivation are apparent on the road the American Academy of Sleep Medicine AASM reports that one in every five serious motor vehicle injuries is related to driver fatigue with 80 000 drivers falling asleep behind the wheel every day and 250 000 accidents every year related to sleep 77 though the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration suggests the figure for traffic accidents may be closer to 100 000 45 The AASM recommends pulling off the road and taking a 15 or 20 minute nap to alleviate drowsiness 77 According to a 2000 study published in the British Medical Journal researchers in Australia and New Zealand reported that sleep deprivation can have some of the same hazardous effects as being drunk 78 People who drove after being awake for 17 19 hours performed worse than those with a blood alcohol level of 0 05 percent which is the legal limit for drunk driving in most western European countries and Australia Another study suggested that performance begins to degrade after 16 hours awake and 21 hours awake was equivalent to a blood alcohol content of 0 08 percent which is the blood alcohol limit for drunk driving in Canada the U S and the U K 79 The fatigue of drivers of goods trucks and passenger vehicles has come to the attention of authorities in many countries where specific laws have been introduced with the aim of reducing the risk of traffic accidents due to driver fatigue Rules concerning minimum break lengths maximum shift lengths and minimum time between shifts are common in the driving regulations used in different countries and regions such as the drivers working hours regulations in the European Union and hours of service regulations in the United States The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill was the second largest oil spill in United States waters after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill This accident occurred when an Exxon oil tanker struck a reef at Prince William Sound in Alaska Approximately 10 8 million gallons of oil spilled into the sea The accident caused great environmental damage including the deaths of hundreds of thousands of birds and sea creatures Fatigue and sleep deprivation were the major contributors to the accident The captain of the ship was asleep after a night of heavy drinking he was severely fatigued and had been awake for 18 hours The entire crew was suffering from fatigue and inadequate sleep 80 Fatigue edit Sleep deprivation and disruption is associated with subsequent fatigue 81 82 Sleep transition edit Sleep propensity SP can be defined as the readiness to transition from wakefulness to sleep or the ability to stay asleep if already sleeping 83 Sleep deprivation increases this propensity which can be measured by polysomnography PSG as a reduction in sleep latency the time needed to fall asleep 84 An indicator of sleep propensity can also be seen in the shortening of the transition from light stages of non REM sleep to deeper slow wave oscillations 84 On average the latency in healthy adults decreases by a few minutes after a night without sleep and the latency from sleep onset to slow wave sleep is halved 84 Sleep latency is generally measured with the multiple sleep latency test MSLT In contrast the maintenance of wakefulness test MWT also uses sleep latency but this time as a measure of the capacity of the participants to stay awake when asked to instead of falling asleep 84 Sleep wake cycle edit People aged 18 to 64 need seven to nine hours of sleep per night 85 Research studying sleep deprivation shows its impact on mood cognitive and motor functioning due to dysregulation of the sleep wake cycle and augmented sleep propensity 84 Multiple studies that identified the role of the hypothalamus and multiple neural systems controlling circadian rhythms and homeostasis have been helpful in understanding sleep deprivation better 84 86 To describe the temporal course of the sleep wake cycle the two process model of sleep regulation can be mentioned 84 This model proposes a homeostatic process Process S and a circadian process Process C that interact to define the time and intensity of sleep 87 Process S represents the drive for sleep increasing during wakefulness and decreasing during sleep until a defined threshold level while Process C is the oscillator responsible for these levels When being sleep deprived homeostatic pressure accumulates to the point that waking functions will be degraded even at the highest circadian drive for wakefulness 84 87 Microsleeps edit Microsleeps are periods of brief sleep that most frequently occur when a person has a significant level of sleep deprivation Microsleeps usually last for a few seconds usually no longer than 15 seconds 88 and happen most frequently when a person is trying to stay awake when they are feeling sleepy 89 The person usually falls into microsleep while doing a monotonous task like driving reading a book or staring at a computer 90 Microsleeps are similar to blackouts and a person experiencing them is not consciously aware that they are occurring An even lighter type of sleep has been seen in rats that have been kept awake for long periods of time In a process known as local sleep specific localized brain regions went into periods of short 80 ms but frequent 40 min NREM like states Despite the on and off periods where neurons shut off the rats appeared to be awake although they performed poorly at tests 91 Cardiovascular morbidity edit Decreased sleep duration is associated with many adverse cardiovascular consequences 92 93 94 95 The American Heart Association has stated that sleep restriction is a risk factor for adverse cardiometabolic profiles and outcomes The organization recommends healthy sleep habits for ideal cardiac health along with other well known factors like blood pressure cholesterol diet glucose weight smoking and physical activity 96 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has noted that adults who sleep less than seven hours per day are more likely to have chronic health conditions including heart attack coronary heart disease and stroke compared to those with an adequate amount of sleep 97 In a study that followed over 160 000 healthy non obese adults the subjects who self reported sleep duration less than six hours a day were at increased risk for developing multiple cardiometabolic risk factors They presented with increased central obesity elevated fasting glucose hypertension low high density lipoprotein hypertriglyceridemia and metabolic syndrome The presence or lack of insomnia symptoms did not modify the effects of sleep duration in this study 98 The United Kingdom Biobank studied nearly 500 000 adults who had no cardiovascular disease and the subjects who slept less than six hours a day were associated with a 20 percent increase in the risk of developing myocardial infarction MI over a seven year follow up period Interestingly a long sleep duration of more than nine hours a night was also a risk factor 99 Immunosuppression edit Among the myriad of health consequences that sleep deprivation can cause disruption of the immune system is one of them While it is not clearly understood researchers believe that sleep is essential to providing sufficient energy for the immune system to work and allowing inflammation to take place during sleep Also just as sleep can reinforce memory in a person s brain it can help consolidate the memory of the immune system or adaptive immunity 100 101 Sleep quality is directly related to immunity levels The team led by Professor Cohen of Carnegie Mellon University in the United States found that even a slight disturbance of sleep may affect the body s response to the cold virus Those with better sleep quality had significantly higher blood T and B lymphocytes than those with poor sleep quality These two lymphocytes are the main body of immune function in the human body 102 An adequate amount of sleep improves the effects of vaccines that utilize adaptive immunity When vaccines expose the body to a weakened or deactivated antigen the body initiates an immune response The immune system learns to recognize that antigen and attacks it when exposed again in the future Studies have found that people who don t sleep the night after getting a vaccine are less likely to develop a proper immune response to the vaccine and sometimes even require a second dose citation needed People who are sleep deprived in general also do not provide their bodies with sufficient time for an adequate immunological memory to form and thus can fail to benefit from vaccination 100 People who sleep less than six hours a night are more susceptible to infection and are more likely to catch a cold or flu A lack of sleep can also prolong the recovery time of patients in the intensive care unit ICU 100 103 104 Weight gain edit Main article Sleep and weight A lack of sleep can cause an imbalance in several hormones that are critical for weight gain Sleep deprivation increases the level of ghrelin hunger hormone and decreases the level of leptin fullness hormone resulting in an increased feeling of hunger and a desire for high calorie foods 105 106 Sleep loss is also associated with decreased growth hormone and elevated cortisol levels which are connected to obesity People who do not get sufficient sleep can also feel sleepy and fatigued during the day and get less exercise Obesity can cause poor sleep quality as well Individuals who are overweight or obese can experience obstructive sleep apnea gastroesophageal reflux disease GERD depression asthma and osteoarthritis all of which can disrupt a good night s sleep 107 In rats prolonged complete sleep deprivation increased both food intake and energy expenditure with a net effect of weight loss and ultimately death 108 This study hypothesizes that the moderate chronic sleep debt associated with habitual short sleep is associated with increased appetite and energy expenditure with the equation tipped towards food intake rather than expenditure in societies where high calorie food is freely available 106 Type 2 diabetes edit It has been suggested that people experiencing short term sleep restrictions process glucose more slowly than individuals receiving a full 8 hours of sleep increasing the likelihood of developing type 2 diabetes 109 Poor sleep quality is linked to high blood sugar levels in diabetic and prediabetic patients but the causal relationship is not clearly understood Researchers suspect that sleep deprivation affects insulin cortisol and oxidative stress which subsequently influence blood sugar levels Sleep deprivation can increase the level of ghrelin and decrease the level of leptin People who get insufficient amounts of sleep are more likely to crave food in order to compensate for the lack of energy This habit can raise blood sugar and put them at risk of obesity and diabetes 110 In 2005 a study of over 1400 participants showed that participants who habitually slept fewer hours were more likely to have associations with type 2 diabetes 111 However because this study was merely correlational the direction of cause and effect between little sleep and diabetes is uncertain The authors point to an earlier study that showed that experimental rather than habitual restriction of sleep resulted in impaired glucose tolerance IGT 112 Other effects edit The National Sleep Foundation identifies several warning signs that a driver is dangerously fatigued These include rolling down the window turning up the radio having trouble keeping eyes open head nodding drifting out of their lane and daydreaming At particular risk are lone drivers between midnight and 6 00 a m 113 Sleep deprivation can negatively impact overall performance and has led to major fatal accidents Due largely to the February 2009 crash of Colgan Air Flight 3407 which killed 50 people and was partially attributed to pilot fatigue the FAA reviewed its procedures to ensure that pilots are sufficiently rested Air traffic controllers were under scrutiny when in 2010 there were 10 incidents of controllers falling asleep while on shift The common practice of turn around shifts caused sleep deprivation and was a contributing factor to all air traffic control incidents The FAA reviewed its practices for shift changes and the findings showed that controllers were not well rested 114 A 2004 study also found medical residents with less than four hours of sleep a night made more than twice as many errors as the 11 of surveyed residents who slept for more than seven hours a night 115 Twenty four hours of continuous sleep deprivation results in the choice of less difficult math tasks without a decrease in subjective reports of effort applied to the task citation needed Naturally occurring sleep loss affects the choice of everyday tasks such that low effort tasks are mostly commonly selected citation needed Adolescents who experience less sleep show a decreased willingness to engage in sports activities that require effort through fine motor coordination and attention to detail 116 117 Great sleep deprivation mimics psychosis distorted perceptions can lead to inappropriate emotional and behavioral responses 118 Astronauts have reported performance errors and decreased cognitive ability during periods of extended working hours and wakefulness as well as sleep loss caused by circadian rhythm disruption and environmental factors 119 One study has found that a single night of sleep deprivation may cause tachycardia a condition in which the heartrate exceeds 100 beats per minute in the following day 120 121 Generally sleep deprivation may facilitate or intensify 122 aching muscles 123 confusion memory lapses or loss 124 depression 124 development of false memory hypnagogic and hypnopompic hallucinations during falling asleep and waking which are entirely normal 125 hand tremor 126 headaches malaise stye periorbital puffiness commonly known as bags under eyes or eye bags increased blood pressure 127 increased stress hormone levels 127 increased risk of type 2 diabetes 127 lowering of immunity increased susceptibility to illness 128 increased risk of fibromyalgia 129 irritability 122 nystagmus rapid involuntary rhythmic eye movement 130 obesity 127 seizures 131 temper tantrums in children 122 violent behavior 132 yawning 122 mania 133 Sleep inertia 134 Sleep deprivation may cause symptoms similar to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD 122 psychosis 125 135 136 137 A 2009 review found that sleep loss had a wide range of cognitive and neurobehavioral effects including unstable attention slowing of response times decline of memory performance reduced learning of cognitive tasks deterioration of performance in tasks requiring divergent thinking perseveration with ineffective solutions performance deterioration as task duration increases and growing neglect of activities judged to be nonessential 138 Assessment editPatients with sleep deprivation may present with complaints of symptoms and signs of insufficient sleep such as fatigue sleepiness drowsy driving and cognitive difficulties Sleep insufficiency can easily go unrecognized and undiagnosed unless patients are specifically asked about it by their clinicians 139 Several questions are critical in evaluating sleep duration and quality as well as the cause of sleep deprivation Sleep patterns typical bed time or rise time on weekdays and weekends shift work and frequency of naps can reveal the direct cause of poor sleep and quality of sleep should be discussed to rule out any diseases such as obstructive sleep apnea and restless leg syndrome 139 Sleep diaries are useful in providing detailed information about sleep patterns They are inexpensive readily available and easy to use The diaries can be as simple as a 24 hour log to note the time of being asleep or can be detailed to include other relevant information 140 141 Sleep questionnaires such as the Sleep Timing Questionnaire STQ can be used instead of sleep diaries if there is any concern for patient adherence 142 Actigraphy is a useful objective wrist worn tool if the validity of self reported sleep diaries or questionnaires is questionable Actigraphy works by recording movements and using computerized algorithms to estimate total sleep time sleep onset latency the amount of wake after sleep onset and sleep efficiency Some devices have light sensors to detect light exposure 143 144 145 146 Management editAlthough there are numerous causes of sleep deprivation there are some fundamental measures that promote quality sleep as suggested by organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the National Institute of Health the National Institute of Aging and the American Academy of Family Physicians Historically sleep hygiene as first medically defined by Hauri in 1977 147 was the standard for promoting healthy sleep habits but evidence that has emerged since the 2010s suggests they are ineffective both for people with insomnia 148 and for people without 147 The key is to implement healthier sleep habits also known as sleep hygiene 149 Sleep hygiene recommendations include setting a fixed sleep schedule taking naps with caution maintaining a sleep environment that promotes sleep cool temperature limited exposure to light and noise comfortable mattresses and pillows exercising daily avoiding alcohol cigarettes caffeine and heavy meals in the evening winding down and avoiding electronic use or physical activities close to bedtime and getting out of bed if unable to fall asleep 150 For long term involuntary sleep deprivation cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia CBT i is recommended as a first line treatment after the exclusion of a physical diagnosis e g sleep apnea 148 CBT i contains five different components cognitive therapy stimulus control sleep restriction sleep hygiene and relaxation As this approach has minimal adverse effects and long term benefits it is often preferred to chronic drug therapy 151 There are several strategies that help increase alertness and counteract the effects of sleep deprivation Caffeine is often used over short periods to boost wakefulness when acute sleep deprivation is experienced however caffeine is less effective if taken routinely 152 Other strategies recommended by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine include prophylactic sleep before deprivation naps other stimulants and combinations thereof However the only sure and safe way to combat sleep deprivation is to increase nightly sleep time 153 Uses editTo facilitate abusive control edit Sleep deprivation can be used to disorient abuse victims to help set them up for abusive control 154 155 Interrogation edit Sleep deprivation can be used as a means of interrogation which has resulted in court trials over whether or not the technique is a form of torture 156 Under one interrogation technique a subject might be kept awake for several days and when finally allowed to fall asleep suddenly awakened and questioned Menachem Begin the Prime Minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983 described his experience of sleep deprivation as a prisoner of the NKVD in the Soviet Union as follows In the head of the interrogated prisoner a haze begins to form His spirit is wearied to death his legs are unsteady and he has one sole desire to sleep Anyone who has experienced this desire knows that not even hunger and thirst are comparable with it 157 Sleep deprivation was one of the five techniques used by the British government in the 1970s The European Court of Human Rights ruled that the five techniques did not occasion suffering of the particular intensity and cruelty implied by the word torture but amounted to a practice of inhuman and degrading treatment in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights 158 The United States Justice Department released four memos in August 2002 describing interrogation techniques used by the Central Intelligence Agency They first described 10 techniques used in the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah described as a terrorist logistics specialist including sleep deprivation Memos signed by Steven G Bradbury in May 2005 claimed that forced sleep deprivation for up to 180 hours 7 1 2 days 159 160 by shackling a diapered prisoner to the ceiling did not constitute torture 161 nor did the combination of multiple interrogation methods including sleep deprivation constitute torture under United States law 162 163 These memoranda were repudiated and withdrawn during the first months of the Obama administration 159 The question of the extreme use of sleep deprivation as torture has advocates on both sides of the issue In 2006 Australian Federal Attorney General Philip Ruddock argued that sleep deprivation does not constitute torture 164 Nicole Bieske a spokeswoman for Amnesty International Australia has stated the opinion of her organization as follows At the very least sleep deprivation is cruel inhumane and degrading If used for prolonged periods of time it is torture 165 Treating depression edit Further information Sleep Deprivation Therapy Studies show that sleep restriction has some potential for treating depression 10 Those with depression tend to have earlier occurrences of REM sleep with an increased number of rapid eye movements therefore monitoring patients EEG and awakening them during occurrences of REM sleep appear to have a therapeutic effect alleviating depressive symptoms 166 This kind of treatment is known as wake therapy Although as many as 60 of patients show an immediate recovery when sleep deprived most patients relapse the following night The effect has been shown to be linked to an increase in brain derived neurotrophic factor BDNF 167 A comprehensive evaluation of the human metabolome in sleep deprivation in 2014 found that 27 metabolites are increased after 24 waking hours and suggested serotonin tryptophan and taurine may contribute to the antidepressive effect 168 The incidence of relapse can be decreased by combining sleep deprivation with medication or a combination of light therapy and phase advance going to bed substantially earlier than one s normal time 169 170 Many tricyclic antidepressants suppress REM sleep providing additional evidence for a link between mood and sleep 171 Similarly tranylcypromine has been shown to completely suppress REM sleep at adequate doses Treating insomnia edit Sleep deprivation can be implemented for a short period of time in the treatment of insomnia Some common sleep disorders have been shown to respond to cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia is a multicomponent process that is composed of stimulus control therapy sleep restriction therapy SRT and sleep hygiene therapy 172 One of the components is a controlled regime of sleep restriction in order to restore the homeostatic drive to sleep and encourage normal sleep efficiency 173 Stimulus control therapy is intended to limit behaviors intended to condition the body to sleep while in bed 172 The main goal of stimulus control and sleep restriction therapy is to create an association between bed and sleep Although sleep restriction therapy shows efficacy when applied as an element of cognitive behavioral therapy its efficacy is yet to be proven when used alone 173 151 Sleep hygiene therapy is intended to help patients develop and maintain good sleeping habits Sleep hygiene therapy is not helpful however when used as a monotherapy without the pairing of stimulus control therapy and sleep restriction therapy 172 148 Light stimulation affects the supraoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus controlling circadian rhythm and inhibiting the secretion of melatonin from the pineal gland Light therapy can improve sleep quality improve sleep efficiency and extend sleep duration by helping to establish and consolidate regular sleep wake cycles Light therapy is a natural simple low cost treatment that does not lead to residual effects or tolerance Adverse reactions include headaches and eye fatigue and can also induce mania 174 In addition to the cognitive behavioral treatment of insomnia there are also generally four approaches to treating insomnia medically These are through the use of barbiturates benzodiazepines and benzodiazepine receptor agonists Barbiturates are not considered to be a primary source of treatment due to the fact that they have a low therapeutic index while melatonin agonists are shown to have a higher therapeutic index 172 Military training edit Sleep deprivation has become hardwired into the military culture It is prevalent in the entire force and especially severe for servicemembers deployed in high conflict environments 175 176 Sleep deprivation has been used by the military in training programs to prepare personnel for combat experiences when proper sleep schedules aren t realistic Sleep deprivation is used to create a different schedule pattern that is beyond a typical 24 hour day Sleep deprivation is pivotal in training games such as Keep in Memory exercises where personnel practice memorizing everything they can while under intense stress physically and mentally and being able to describe in as much detail as they can remember of what they remember seeing days later Sleep deprivation is used in training to create soldiers who are used to only going off of a few hours or minutes of sleep randomly when available citation needed DARPA initiated sleep research to create a highly resilient soldier capable of sustaining extremely prolonged wakefulness inspired by the white crowned sparrow s week long sleeplessness during migration at a time when it was not understood that migration birds actually slept with half of their brain This pursuit aimed both to produce a super soldier able to go for a minimum of seven days without sleep and in the longer term perhaps at least double that time frame while preserving high levels of mental and physical performance and to enhance productivity in sleep deprived personnel Military experiments on sleep have been conducted on combatants and prisoners such as those in Guantanamo where controlled lighting is combined with torture techniques to manipulate sensory experiences Crary highlights how constant illumination and the removal of day night distinctions create what he defines as a time of indifference utilizing light management as a form of psychological control 177 178 However studies have since evaluated the impact of the sleep deprivation imprint on the military culture Personnel surveys reveal common challenges such as inadequate sleep fatigue and impaired daytime functioning impacting operational effectiveness and post deployment reintegration These sleep issues elevate the risk of severe mental health disorders including PTSD and depression Early intervention is crucial Though promising implementing cognitive behavioral and imagery rehearsal therapies for insomnia remains a challenge Several high profile military accidents caused in part or fully by sleep deprivation of personnel have been documented The military has prioritized sleep education with recent Army guidelines equating sleep importance to nutrition and exercise The Navy particularly influenced by retired Captain John Cordle has actively experimented with watch schedules to align shipboard life with sailors circadian needs leading to improved sleep patterns especially in submarines supported by ongoing research efforts at the Naval Postgraduate School Watch schedules with longer and more reliable resting intervals are nowadays the norm on U S submarines and a recommended option for surface ships 175 176 In addition to sleep deprivation circadian misalignment as commonly experienced by submarine crews causes several long term health issues and a decrease in cognitive performance 179 Changes in American sleep habits editThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message National Geographic Magazine has reported that the demands of work social activities and the availability of 24 hour home entertainment and Internet access have caused people to sleep less now than in premodern times 180 USA Today reported in 2007 that most adults in the USA get about an hour less than the average sleep time 40 years ago 181 Other researchers have questioned these claims A 2004 editorial in the journal Sleep stated that according to the available data the average number of hours of sleep in a 24 hour period has not changed significantly in recent decades among adults Furthermore the editorial suggests that there is a range of normal sleep time required by healthy adults and many indicators used to suggest chronic sleepiness among the population as a whole do not stand up to scientific scrutiny 182 A comparison of data collected from the Bureau of Labor Statistics American Time Use Survey from 1965 to 1985 and 1998 2001 has been used to show that the median amount of sleep napping and resting done by the average adult American has changed by less than 0 7 from a median of 482 minutes per day from 1965 through 1985 to 479 minutes per day from 1998 through 2001 183 184 Longest periods without sleep editRandy Gardner holds the scientifically documented record for the longest period of time a human being has intentionally gone without sleep not using stimulants of any kind Gardner stayed awake for 264 hours 11 days breaking the previous record of 260 hours held by Tom Rounds of Honolulu 118 Lieutenant Commander John J Ross of the U S Navy Medical Neuropsychiatric Research Unit later published an account of this event which became well known among sleep deprivation researchers 118 185 186 The Guinness World Record stands at 449 hours 18 days 17 hours held by Maureen Weston of Peterborough Cambridgeshire in April 1977 in a rocking chair marathon 185 Claims of total sleep deprivation lasting years have been made several times 187 188 189 but none are scientifically verified 190 Claims of partial sleep deprivation are better documented For example Rhett Lamb of St Petersburg Florida was initially reported to not sleep at all but actually had a rare condition permitting him to sleep only one to two hours per day in the first three years of his life He had a rare abnormality called an Arnold Chiari malformation where brain tissue protrudes into the spinal canal and the skull puts pressure on the protruding part of 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