Sleep and 24 hour body temperatures: a comparison in young men, naturally cycling women and women faking hormonal contraceptives

被引:145
作者
Baker, FC [1 ]
Waner, JI [1 ]
Vieira, EF [1 ]
Taylor, SR [1 ]
Driver, HS [1 ]
Mitchell, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Witwatersrand, Dept Physiol, Brain Funct Unit, Wits Sleep Lab, Johannesburg, South Africa
来源
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON | 2001年 / 530卷 / 03期
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-7793.2001.0565k.x
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
1. Body temperature has a circadian rhythm, and in women with ovulatory cycles, also a menstrual rhythm. Body temperature and sleep are believed to be closely coupled, but the influence on their relationship of gender, menstrual cycle phase and female reproductive hormones is unresolved. 2. We investigated sleep and 24 h rectal temperatures in eight women with normal menstrual cycles in their mid-follicular and mid-luteal phases, and in eight young women taking a steady dose of oral progestin and ethinyl oestradiol (hormonal contraceptive), and compared their sleep and body temperatures with that of eight young men, sleeping in identical conditions. All subjects maintained their habitual daytime schedules. 3. Rectal temperatures were elevated throughout 24 h in the luteal phase compared with the follicular phase in the naturally cycling women, consistent with a raised thermoregulatory set-point. Rectal temperatures in the women taking hormonal contraceptives were similar to those of the naturally cycling women in the luteal phase. 4. Gender influenced body temperature: the naturally cycling women and the women taking hormonal contraceptives attained their nocturnal minimum body temperatures earlier than the men, and the naturally cycling women had blunted nocturnal body temperature drops compared with the men. 5. Sleep architecture was essentially unaffected by either menstrual cycle phase or gender. The women taking hormonal contraceptives had less slow wave sleep (SWS), however, than the naturally cycling women. 6. Gender, menstrual cycle phase and hormonal contraceptives significantly influenced body temperature, but had only minor consequences for sleep, in the young men and women in our study
引用
收藏
页码:565 / 574
页数:10
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC-STUDY OF YOUNG-WOMEN WITH DYSMENORRHEA [J].
ANDERSCH, B ;
MILSOM, I .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 1982, 144 (06) :655-660
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1974, ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAP
[3]   THE DISTRIBUTION OF EEG FREQUENCIES IN REM AND NREM SLEEP STAGES IN HEALTHY-YOUNG ADULTS [J].
ARMITAGE, R .
SLEEP, 1995, 18 (05) :334-341
[4]  
BAEHR E, 1999, SLEEP, V22, pS164
[5]   High nocturnal body temperatures and disturbed sleep in women with primary dysmenorrhea [J].
Baker, FC ;
Driver, HS ;
Rogers, GG ;
Paiker, J ;
Mitchell, D .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 1999, 277 (06) :E1013-E1021
[6]   Different nocturnal body temperatures and sleep with forced-air warming in men and in women taking hormonal contraceptives [J].
Baker, FC ;
Selsick, H ;
Driver, HS ;
Taylor, SR ;
Mitchell, D .
JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH, 1998, 7 (03) :175-181
[7]  
BARRETT J, 1993, SLEEP, V16, P93
[8]   Regulation of the 24-hour rhythm of body temperature in menstrual cycles with spontaneous and gonadotropin-induced ovulation [J].
Cagnacci, A ;
Volpe, A ;
Paoletti, AM ;
Melis, GB .
FERTILITY AND STERILITY, 1997, 68 (03) :421-425
[9]   Modification of circadian body temperature rhythm during the luteal menstrual phase: Role of melatonin [J].
Cagnacci, A ;
Soldani, R ;
Laughlin, GA ;
Yen, SSC .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 80 (01) :25-29
[10]   INCREASED PLASMA INTERLEUKIN-1 ACTIVITY IN WOMEN AFTER OVULATION [J].
CANNON, JG ;
DINARELLO, CA .
SCIENCE, 1985, 227 (4691) :1247-1249