Publication | Closed Access
Neurological Findings After Prolonged Sleep Deprivation
69
Citations
12
References
1965
Year
Sleep DisordersSleep HealthNeuropsychologyBiofeedbackProlonged Sleep DeprivationSocial SciencesSleep MedicineBrain InjuryNeurologySleep PhysiologyPain ManagementNeuropathologyHuman BeingsSleepMedicineRehabilitationInsomniaSleep RoutinesSleep DeprivationSleep Disordered BreathingSleep DisorderNeurophysiologyNeuroscienceSleep ApneaCircadian RhythmSleep QualitySleep Psychology
IN SPITE of the awareness that prolonged wakefulness has a detrimental effect on human beings, it was not until 1896 that Patrick and Gilbert<sup>1</sup>first studied three human beings for 90 hours of wakefulness and demonstrated decreases in sensory acuity, motor speed, ability to memorize, and the production of visual hallucinations. Since that time there has been a gradual increase in interest in sleep deprivation by psychologists, physiologists, and psychiatrists. Experiments have primarily taken the form of enforced abstention from sleep for varied lengths of time, with performance and learning tests being administered before, during, and after the prolonged vigil. Studies of the effect of prolonged sleep deprivation from a neurologic point of view, however, are relatively rare. Cooperman et al<sup>2</sup>demonstrated with von Frey hairs that pain occurred with a weaker stimulation after 60 hours of wakefulness; Freeman<sup>3</sup>described increased tone in the quadriceps muscle after
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