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A replicate crossover trial on the inter-individual variability of sleep indices in response to acute exercise undertaken by healthy men

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posted on 2025-02-06, 11:10 authored by Yuting Yang, Alice ThackrayAlice Thackray, Tonghui Shen, Tareq F. Alotaibi, Turki Alanazi, Tom CliffordTom Clifford, Iuliana HartescuIuliana Hartescu, James KingJames King, Scott WillisScott Willis, Matthew RobertsMatthew Roberts, Lorenzo Lolli, Greg Atkinson, David StenselDavid Stensel

Study objective: Using the necessary replicate-crossover design, we investigated whether there is inter-individual variability in home-assessed sleep in response to acute exercise.
Methods: Eighteen healthy men (mean(SD): 26(6) years) completed two identical control (8-h laboratory rest, 08:45-16:45) and two identical exercise (7-h laboratory rest; 1-h laboratory treadmill run [62(7)% peak oxygen uptake], 15:15-16:15) trials in randomised sequences. Wrist-worn actigraphy (MotionWatch 8) measured home-based sleep (total sleep time, actual wake time, sleep latency, sleep efficiency) two nights before (nights 1-2) and three nights after (nights 3-5) the exercise/control day. Pearson’s correlation coefficients quantified the consistency of individual differences between the replicates of control-adjusted exercise responses to explore: (1) immediate (night 3 minus night 2); (2) delayed (night 5 minus night 2); and (3) overall (average post-intervention minus average pre-intervention) exercise- related effects. Within-participant linear mixed models and a random-effects between- participant meta-analysis estimated participant-by-trial response heterogeneity.
Results: For all comparisons and sleep outcomes, the between-replicate correlations were non-significant, ranging from trivial-to-moderate (r range = -0.44 to 0.41, P≥0.065). Participant-by-trial interactions were trivial. Individual differences SDs were small, prone to uncertainty around the estimates indicated by wide 95% confidence intervals and did not provide support for true individual response heterogeneity. Meta-analyses of the between-participant, replicate-averaged condition effect revealed that, again, heterogeneity (τ) was negligible for most sleep outcomes.
Conclusion: Control-adjusted sleep in response to acute exercise was inconsistent when measured on repeated occasions. Inter-individual differences in sleep in response to exercise4 were small compared to the natural (trial-to-trial) within-subject variability in sleep outcomes.

Funding

King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences (Saudi Arabia)

National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (United Kingdom)

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Sleep

Publisher

Oxford University Press, on behalf of Sleep Research Society

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.

Acceptance date

2024-10-17

Publication date

2024-10-24

Copyright date

2024

ISSN

0161-8105

eISSN

1550-9109

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Alice Thackray. Deposit date: 17 October 2024

Article number

zsae250

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