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Vol. 83, Issue 6, 2005-2011, December 1997
School of Behavioural Science, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia
Received 28 October 1996; accepted in final form 23 July 1997.
Trinder, John, John A. Van Beveren, Philip Smith, Jan
Kleiman, and Amanda Kay. Correlation between ventilation and EEG-defined arousal during sleep onset in young subjects.
J. Appl. Physiol. 83(6):
2005-2011, 1997.
In studies of elderly individuals, ventilation
and EEG-defined arousal have been shown to vary periodically and
synchronously. Such results have been interpreted as indicating the
primacy of sleep/wake state in causing ventilatory instability during
sleep onset. However, because the elderly individuals studied were
periodic breathers, the results do not unequivocally support this
conclusion. In this study the relationship between ventilation and
EEG-defined arousal was assessed in a group of 21 young, healthy men in
whom ventilatory instability during sleep onset was not periodic.
Ventilation and EEG
(O1-A2)
recordings were collected, and the longest uncontaminated periods from
early and late in sleep onset were selected for subsequent analysis.
The 84 time series (21 subjects, 2 variables, and 2 occasions in sleep
onset) were subjected to spectral analysis to identify periodicity, and the relationship between the two variables was determined by
cross-correlational methods. The results indicated that the time series
were nonperiodic, yet significant correlations were observed between
the two variables. The data support the view that during sleep onset
ventilatory instability is driven primarily by variations in sleep/wake
arousal level.
electroencephalogram; periodic breathing; respiratory instability; sleep onset
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