The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.

INTRODUCTION:Many sleep and circadian studies require participants to adhere to structured sleep-wake schedules designed to stabilize sleep outcomes and circadian phase prior to in-laboratory testing. The effectiveness of this approach has not been rigorously evaluated, however. We therefore investi...

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Main Authors: William R McMahon, Suzanne Ftouni, Andrew J K Phillips, Caroline Beatty, Steven W Lockley, Shanthakumar M W Rajaratnam, Paul Maruff, Sean P A Drummond, Clare Anderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236566
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spelling doaj-a9020acaab2b4c9db86a4231e7fa940f2021-03-03T21:58:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023656610.1371/journal.pone.0236566The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.William R McMahonSuzanne FtouniAndrew J K PhillipsCaroline BeattySteven W LockleyShanthakumar M W RajaratnamPaul MaruffSean P A DrummondClare AndersonINTRODUCTION:Many sleep and circadian studies require participants to adhere to structured sleep-wake schedules designed to stabilize sleep outcomes and circadian phase prior to in-laboratory testing. The effectiveness of this approach has not been rigorously evaluated, however. We therefore investigated the differences between participants' unstructured and structured sleep over a three-week interval. METHODS:Twenty-three healthy young adults completed three weeks of sleep monitoring, including one week of unstructured sleep and two weeks of structured sleep with consistent bed and wake times. Circadian phase was assessed via salivary dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) during both the unstructured and structured sleep episodes. RESULTS:Compared to their unstructured sleep schedule, participants' bed- and wake times were significantly earlier in their structured sleep, by 34 ± 44 mins (M ± SD) and 44 ± 41 mins, respectively. During structured sleep, circadian phase was earlier in 65% of participants (40 ± 32 mins) and was later in 35% (41 ± 25 mins) compared to unstructured sleep but did not change at the group level. While structured sleep reduced night-to-night variability in sleep timing and sleep duration, and improved the alignment (phase angle) between sleep onset and circadian phase in the most poorly aligned individuals (DLMO < 1h or > 3h before sleep onset time; 25% of our sample), sleep duration and quality were unchanged. CONCLUSION:Our results show adherence to a structured sleep schedule results in more regular sleep timing, and improved alignment between sleep and circadian timing for those individuals who previously had poorer alignment. Our findings support the use of structured sleep schedules prior to in-laboratory sleep and circadian studies to stabilize sleep and circadian timing in healthy volunteers.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236566
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William R McMahon
Suzanne Ftouni
Andrew J K Phillips
Caroline Beatty
Steven W Lockley
Shanthakumar M W Rajaratnam
Paul Maruff
Sean P A Drummond
Clare Anderson
spellingShingle William R McMahon
Suzanne Ftouni
Andrew J K Phillips
Caroline Beatty
Steven W Lockley
Shanthakumar M W Rajaratnam
Paul Maruff
Sean P A Drummond
Clare Anderson
The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet William R McMahon
Suzanne Ftouni
Andrew J K Phillips
Caroline Beatty
Steven W Lockley
Shanthakumar M W Rajaratnam
Paul Maruff
Sean P A Drummond
Clare Anderson
author_sort William R McMahon
title The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
title_short The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
title_full The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
title_fullStr The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
title_full_unstemmed The impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: Individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
title_sort impact of structured sleep schedules prior to an in-laboratory study: individual differences in sleep and circadian timing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description INTRODUCTION:Many sleep and circadian studies require participants to adhere to structured sleep-wake schedules designed to stabilize sleep outcomes and circadian phase prior to in-laboratory testing. The effectiveness of this approach has not been rigorously evaluated, however. We therefore investigated the differences between participants' unstructured and structured sleep over a three-week interval. METHODS:Twenty-three healthy young adults completed three weeks of sleep monitoring, including one week of unstructured sleep and two weeks of structured sleep with consistent bed and wake times. Circadian phase was assessed via salivary dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) during both the unstructured and structured sleep episodes. RESULTS:Compared to their unstructured sleep schedule, participants' bed- and wake times were significantly earlier in their structured sleep, by 34 ± 44 mins (M ± SD) and 44 ± 41 mins, respectively. During structured sleep, circadian phase was earlier in 65% of participants (40 ± 32 mins) and was later in 35% (41 ± 25 mins) compared to unstructured sleep but did not change at the group level. While structured sleep reduced night-to-night variability in sleep timing and sleep duration, and improved the alignment (phase angle) between sleep onset and circadian phase in the most poorly aligned individuals (DLMO < 1h or > 3h before sleep onset time; 25% of our sample), sleep duration and quality were unchanged. CONCLUSION:Our results show adherence to a structured sleep schedule results in more regular sleep timing, and improved alignment between sleep and circadian timing for those individuals who previously had poorer alignment. Our findings support the use of structured sleep schedules prior to in-laboratory sleep and circadian studies to stabilize sleep and circadian timing in healthy volunteers.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236566
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