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. 2002 Dec;25(8):882-7.

Increased production of evoked and spontaneous K-complexes following a night of fragmented sleep

Affiliations
  • PMID: 12489895

Increased production of evoked and spontaneous K-complexes following a night of fragmented sleep

Christian L Nicholas et al. Sleep. 2002 Dec.

Abstract

Study objectives: To determine whether K-complex production is better interpreted as being an arousal response or reflective of a sleep protective micro-state.

Design: A 3-night study--night 1 as a baseline night, night 2 as a sleep fragmentation night, followed immediately by night 3 as a recovery night. On nights 1 and 3, approximately 400 auditory stimuli were presented during nonREM sleep in the first two sleep cycles, using stimulus parameters previously found to be optimal for K-complex production.

Setting: The sleep research laboratory at the University of Melbourne.

Participants: Six young healthy subjects (3 female).

Interventions: One night of sleep fragmentation. Ten-second auditory tones of up to 110 dB were presented throughout the entire night at approximately 1-minute intervals.

Measurements and results: Sleep drive was increased on the recovery night, as indicated by increased amounts of slow wave sleep, increased sleep efficiency, and a reduction in stimulus-related alpha activity. The incidence of both evoked and spontaneous K-complexes increased significantly on the recovery night. When K-complex trials were averaged, neither N550 (Fz) amplitude nor latency differed between the 2 nights. When vertex sharp waves were averaged, N350 (Cz) amplitude was increased significantly on the recovery night.

Conclusions: The increase in K-complex frequency together with the decrease seen in stimulus-related alpha activity supports the view that they reflect a sleep maintenance, rather than an arousal, response.

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