Simulated microgravity affects sleep, physiological rhythms


Friday, 03 May, 2024

Simulated microgravity affects sleep, physiological rhythms

The simulated effects of microgravity significantly affect rhythmicity and sleep in humans, according to a new study conducted by the University of Surrey and published in npj Microgravity. Such disturbances could negatively affect the physiology and performance of astronauts in space.

Previous findings have shown that astronauts exposed to microgravity, simulated via 60 days of constant bed rest at a 6° head-down tilt angle, experience changes to physiology, including immune suppression, increased inflammation, and reduced muscle mass and bone density. However, a less-studied aspect of physiology concerning the effects of microgravity is sleep and biological rhythms.

In a study coordinated by the European Space Agency at the MEDES Space Clinic in Toulouse, 20 men completed a 90-day protocol consisting of two weeks of baseline; 60 days of constant bed rest at a 6° head-down tilt angle, simulating the effects of microgravity experienced by astronauts; and two weeks of recovery. This is believed to be the first time that sleep and various biological rhythms have been evaluated from an integrative perspective in a head-down tilt bed rest protocol for this long.

To assess the impact of simulated microgravity, the research team analysed wrist skin temperature, motor activity, light exposure and diurnal sleepiness throughout the 90-day protocol. Sleep was assessed through an electroencephalogram (EEG) over a 24-hour time series during two days in baseline, three days in bed rest and once in recovery. During those sessions, saliva sampling allowed measurement of the phase and amplitude of melatonin, a hormone that regulates sleep-wake cycles, and secretion of cortisol, the body’s main stress hormone.

Researchers observed a decrease in the amplitude of temperature, activity and sleepiness rhythms during bed rest. Sleep duration decreased at the beginning of bed rest, and on average, participants slept less than 6.5 hours during the night throughout the study. Researchers note that partial sleep deprivation of a similar extent has been found to result in changes in immune system function and inflammatory status during both bed rest and spaceflight. The reverse was found for daytime sleep (naps), with an increase in naps, particularly at the beginning of the study, being detected.

Results also confirmed the temporal association between peripheral skin temperature and melatonin secretion, even under bed rest conditions. However, the association of peripheral temperature with different sleep stages (wrist skin temperature increases as sleep becomes deeper) was lost during bed rest, which could indicate a disruption in thermoregulation processes related to sleep.

“Biological rhythms are disrupted and sleep is restricted in space flight, and this impacts on physiology and performance,” said senior author Professor Simon Archer. “The normal posture cycle is a significant reinforcement signal for biological rhythmicity, and its removal in this protocol and absence in space flight likely contributes to reduction in rhythmic amplitudes of many of the variables studied here. These results have important implications for future spaceflight but also for conditions where individuals are confined to long-term bed rest.”

“We are confident that these findings will serve in designing new protocols aimed at improving sleep and rhythmic robustness in space,” said lead author Dr María-Ángeles Bonmatí-Carrión, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Surrey. “In addition, our results can also be applied to other processes such as aging or the impact of constant posture in our sleep and rhythms.”

Image credit: iStock.com/YakobchukOlena

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