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1 Department of Psychology,
Electroencephalographic slow-wave activity
(SWA) in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep is directly related to
prior sleep/wake history, with high levels of SWA following extended
periods of wake. Therefore, SWA has been thought to reflect the level
of accumulated sleep need. The discovery that euthermic intervals between hibernation bouts are spent primarily in sleep and that this
sleep is characterized by high and monotonically declining SWA has led
to speculation that sleep homeostasis may play a fundamental role in
the regulation of the timing of bouts of hibernation and periodic
arousals to euthermia. It was proposed that because the SWA profile
seen after arousal from hibernation is strikingly similar to what is
seen in nonhibernating mammals after extended periods of wakefulness,
that hibernating mammals may arouse from hibernation with significant
accumulated sleep need. This sleep need may accumulate during
hibernation because the low brain temperatures during hibernation may
not be compatible with sleep restorative processes. In the present
study, golden-mantled ground squirrels were sleep deprived during the
first 4 h of interbout euthermia by injection of caffeine (20 mg/kg
ip). We predicted that if the SWA peaks after bouts of hibernation
reflected a homeostatic response to an accumulated sleep need, sleep
deprivation should simply have displaced and possibly augmented the SWA
to subsequent recovery sleep. Instead we found that after
caffeine-induced sleep deprivation of animals just aroused from
hibernation, the anticipated high SWA typical of recovery sleep did not
occur. Similar results were found in a study that induced sleep
deprivation by gentle handling (19). These findings indicate that the
SWA peak immediately after hibernation does not represent homeostatic
regulation of NREM sleep, as it normally does after prolonged
wakefulness during euthermia, but instead may reflect some other
neurological process in the recovery of brain function from an extended
period at low temperature.
slow-wave activity; non-rapid eye movement sleep; rapid eye movement sleep; electroencephalogram; spectral analysis; sleep deprivation; caffeine
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