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Kinetics of Non-Rapid Eye Movement Delta Production Across Sleep and Waking in Young and Elderly Normal Subjects: Theoretical Implications
Changes in deep sleep brain waves during sleep and wakefulness in young and older adults: possible explanations
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Abstract
Delta power production during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep is significantly lower in elderly normal adults than in young normal adults.
- Elderly normal adults exhibited lower rates of delta power and integrated amplitude per minute compared to young normal adults.
- Both delta power and integrated amplitude declined linearly across NREM sleep periods and increased linearly across daytime naps for both age groups.
- The slopes of absolute delta power and integrated amplitude were significantly flatter in elderly subjects compared to young subjects.
- Normalization of delta production rates showed that elderly subjects' slopes closely approximated those of young subjects, suggesting similar proportional changes.
- Linear changes in delta power contradict the exponential assumptions of existing sleep models, indicating a need for reevaluation.
- The findings suggest that the homeostatic drive for NREM delta production may be similar in both young and elderly individuals despite differences in absolute production rates.
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