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Journal Article

Citation

Folgueira A, Simonelli G, Plano S, Tortello C, Cuiuli JM, Blanchard A, Patagua A, Brager AJ, Capaldi VF, Aubert AE, Barbarito M, Golombek DA, Vigo DE. Sci. Rep. 2019; 9(1): e10875.

Affiliation

Chronophysiology Lab, Institute for Biomedical Research (BIOMED), Catholic University of Argentina (UCA) and National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina. dvigo@conicet.gov.ar.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/s41598-019-46900-7

PMID

31350440

Abstract

During Antarctic isolation personnel are exposed to extreme photoperiods. A frequent observation is a sleep onset phase delay during winter. It is not known if, as a result, daytime sleeping in the form of naps increases. We sought to assess sleep patterns - with focus on daytime sleeping - and alertness in a Latin American crew overwintering in Argentine Antarctic station Belgrano II. Measurements were collected in 13 males during March, May, July, September and November, and included actigraphy and psychomotor vigilance tasks. Sleep duration significantly decreased during winter. A total of eight participants took at least one weekly nap across all measurement points. During winter, the nap onset was delayed, its duration increased and its efficiency improved. We observed a significant effect of seasonality in the association of evening alertness with sleep onset. Our results replicate previous findings regarding sleep during overwintering in Antarctica, adding the description of the role of napping and the report of a possible modulatory effect of seasonality in the relation between sleep and alertness. Napping should be considered as an important factor in the scheduling of activities of multicultural crews that participate in Antarctica.


Language: en

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