Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Impairs A Person’s Slow Wave Activity During Sleep

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has been associated with altered amounts of slow wave sleep, which could reflect reduced electroencephalograph (EEG) activity and impaired sleep regulation.

A study published in the journal SLEEP finds that CFS is also associated with a blunted slow wave activity (SWA) response to sleep challenge, suggesting an impairment of the basic sleep drive and homeostatic response.

The study, authored by Roseanna Armitage, PhD, and colleagues at the University of Michigan, focused on 13 pairs of identical twins discordant for CFS.

Analyses, which were restricted to the first four non-REM periods each night in order to show comparability, revealed that SWA, or other sleep EEG measures, did not differ between the CFS and healthy twins during a regular night’s sleep.

According to Armitage, it was only after a “challenge” to sleep regulation was introduced (keeping them awake an extra four hours) that the CFS twins exhibited significantly less SWA power in the first non-REM period of recovery sleep and accumulated a smaller percentage of SWA in the first non-REM period than their twin counterparts.

Chronic fatigue syndrome is associated with symptoms of depression. Depressed women did not show a blunted SWA response to sleep challenge.

Adults need seven to eight hours of sleep every night to maintain good health and better performance. If you have a sleep disorder, consult your physician to take the treatment [Sleep Disorders Treatment] as soon as possible.

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