Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Rocking Helps You To fall Asleep

Researchers Sophie Schwartz, Michel Mühlethaler, and their colleagues Laurence Bayer and Irina Constantinescu from the University of Geneva, reporting in the June 21 issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, now have evidence that napping on a slowly swinging bed really does get us to sleep faster.

To the researchers' surprise, rocking also changes the nature of our sleep, encouraging deeper sleep.

12 adult volunteers were asked to nap on a custom-made bed or "experimental hammock" that could either remain stationary or rock gently. All participants were good sleepers who didn't typically nap and did not suffer from excessive sleepiness during the day. Each participant took two 45-minute afternoon naps, one with the bed stationary and one with the bed in motion, while their brain activity was monitored by electroencephalogram (EEG).

A faster transition to sleep in each and every subject in the swinging condition, a result that supports the intuitive notion of facilitation of sleep associated with this rocking. Surprisingly, a dramatic boosting of certain types of sleep-related [brain wave] oscillations were also observed.

More specifically, rocking increased the duration of stage N2 sleep, a form of non-rapid eye movement sleep that normally occupies about half of a good night's sleep. The rocking bed also had a lasting effect on brain activity, increasing slow oscillations and bursts of activity known as sleep spindles. Those effects are consistent with a more synchronized neural activity characteristic of deeper sleep.

Schwartz and Mühlethaler say the next step is to find out whether rocking can improve longer periods of sleep and to find out whether it may be useful for the treatment of sleep disorders, such as insomnia.

Because sleep spindles have been associated with brain plasticity mechanisms, enhancing spindle activity with rocking may be good for memory consolidation and may even have the potential to improve brain repair mechanisms after brain damage.

1 comment:

Sleep Troubles said...

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