An Endogenous Circadian Rhythm in Sleep Inertia Results in Greatest Cognitive Impairment upon Awakening during the Biological Night

Jul 30, 2008Journal of biological rhythms

Natural daily body clock causes the worst mental fog after waking during the biological night

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Abstract

The magnitude of sleep inertia in cognitive performance is 3.6 times larger during the biological night compared to the biological day.

  • Sleep inertia refers to impaired cognitive performance immediately upon awakening, lasting for tens of minutes.
  • Data from 12 adults revealed a significant circadian rhythm in sleep inertia, with p-values indicating statistical significance (p = 0.007 for Stage 2 awakenings).
  • Awakenings occurring during the biological night (approximately 2300-0300 h) showed greater cognitive decline compared to those during the biological day (approximately 1500-1900 h).
  • The observed circadian rhythm in sleep inertia remained significant even when considering all sleep stages (p = 0.004).
  • Changes in sleep efficiency or sleep stage proportions prior to awakenings did not account for the circadian rhythm in sleep inertia.

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