CONTRIBUTION OF CIRCADIAN PHYSIOLOGY AND SLEEP HOMEOSTASIS TO AGE-RELATED CHANGES IN HUMAN SLEEP

Jun 7, 2000Chronobiology international

How Body Clocks and Sleep Drive Changes in Sleep as People Age

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Abstract

Older people wake approximately 1 hour earlier than younger individuals, with shifts in circadian rhythms of body temperature and melatonin.

  • An earlier wake time in older individuals is linked to a 1-hour advance in the rhythms of core body temperature and melatonin.
  • Older people wake at an earlier circadian phase of their body temperature and plasma melatonin rhythms.
  • The amplitude of circadian body temperature rhythms in older individuals is reduced by 20-30%, indicating less robust circadian signaling.
  • Sleep consolidation and duration decrease with age, particularly when sleep is scheduled during the rising phase of body temperature.
  • Sleep-homeostatic mechanisms still function in older individuals, but their levels of EEG slow-wave activity remain lower than those of younger individuals.
  • The shift in awakening times and reduced sleep consolidation may relate to diminished promotion of sleep by the circadian pacemaker during the night.

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