Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Prolonged Sleep Deprivation, With and Without Chronic Physical Exercise, on Mood and Performance
80
Citations
18
References
1985
Year
Sleep DisordersSleep HealthPhysical ActivitySleep LossProlonged Sleep DeprivationSleep-related Breathing DisorderSleep MedicineFatigue ManagementKinesiologyExerciseSleep Deprivation PeriodsClinical ExerciseHealth SciencesSleepPsychiatryPhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyDepressionPsychological DeprivationRehabilitationInsomniaSleep DeprivationSleep Disordered BreathingSleep DisorderCognitive PerformanceExercise PhysiologyPsychological BenefitsMood DisordersMedicineSleep QualitySleep Psychology
ABSTRACT The effects of physical exercise and sleep deprivation on mood and cognitive performance were studied in 12 healthy young male volunteers deprived of sleep on two occasions. During the first 60‐hr period without sleep, half of the subjects walked on a treadmill at 25–30% of their maximum aerobic capacity (Exercise condition) for 1 out of every 3 hrs while the remaining 6 subjects remained physically inactive (No Exercise condition) during that same hour. Eight weeks later the same 12 subjects underwent an identical sleep‐deprivation protocol except that those who were previously inactive exercised, while those who previously exercised remained inactive. Throughout the sleep deprivation periods, subjects in both conditions completed subjective assessments of fatigue, sleepiness and mood every 3 hrs, performed an auditory vigilance task every 6 hrs, and completed a cognitive test battery every 12 hrs. The results revealed clear decrements in mood and performance as a function of sleep loss. However, with the exception of somewhat more long reaction times in the Exercise condition, exercise neither increased nor decreased the impairment induced by sleep deprivation.
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