Reducing bedtime physiological arousal levels using immersive audio-visual respiratory bio-feedback: a pilot study in women with insomnia symptoms

被引:0
作者
Massimiliano de Zambotti
Mikhail Sizintsev
Stephanie Claudatos
Giacinto Barresi
Ian M. Colrain
Fiona C. Baker
机构
[1] SRI International,Center for Health Sciences
[2] SRI International,Center for Vision Technologies
[3] Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia,Department of Advanced Robotics
[4] University of Melbourne,Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences
[5] University of the Witwatersrand,Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology
来源
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2019年 / 42卷
关键词
Relaxation; Falling asleep; Insomnia; Bio-feedback; Polysomnography; Heart rate variability;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Hyperarousal is a critical component of insomnia, particularly at bedtime when individuals are trying to fall asleep. The current study evaluated the effect of a novel, acute behavioral experimental manipulation (combined immersive audio-visual relaxation and biofeedback) in reducing bedtime physiological hyperarousal in women with insomnia symptoms. After a clinical/adaptation polysomnographic (PSG) night, sixteen women with insomnia symptoms had two random-order PSG nights: immersive audio-visual respiratory bio-feedback across the falling asleep period (manipulation night), and no pre-sleep arousal manipulation (control night). While using immersive audio-visual respiratory bio-feedback, overall heart rate variability was increased and heart rate (HR) was reduced (by ~ 5 bpm; p < 0.01), reflecting downregulation of autonomic pre-sleep arousal, relative to no-manipulation. HR continued to be lower during sleep, and participants had fewer awakenings and sleep stage transitions on the manipulation night relative to the control night (p < 0.05). The manipulation did not affect sleep onset latency or other PSG parameters. Overall, this novel behavioral approach targeting the falling asleep process emphasizes the importance of pre-sleep hyperarousal as a potential target for improving sleep and nocturnal autonomic function during sleep in insomnia.
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页码:973 / 983
页数:10
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