Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10455275 | Brain, Behavior, and Immunity | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
We examined the relationship between the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6 and sleep architecture in 70 healthy men and women. Blood was drawn in the early morning for assessment of IL-6 followed by nocturnal sleep monitoring with polysomnography. Sleep records were scored for sleep stages using standard criteria. Morning IL-6 levels were positively correlated with REM latency after sleep onset [Ï = .31, p = .01], percent (%) stage 1 sleep [Ï = .23, p = .053], % wake after sleep onset (WASO) [Ï = .29, p < .05]. IL-6 levels were negatively correlated with sleep efficiency [Ï = â.36, p < .01] and slow wave sleep (SWS) [Ï = â.26, p < .05]. After controlling for demographic variables including race, gender, age, and BMI, multiple hierarchical regression analyses revealed that morning IL-6 levels accounted for a significant portion of the variance of REM latency (p < .01), sleep efficiency (p < .01), and % WASO (p = .01). IL-6 was no longer associated with % stage 1 sleep, SWS, and total sleep time after controlling for the demographic characteristics. These findings suggest that the inflammatory marker IL-6 is associated with sleep quality and that certain individual characteristics such as race, gender, and age modify that relationship. Higher IL-6 levels were associated with lower quality of sleep among healthy asymptomatic men and women.
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Authors
Suzi Hong, Paul J. Mills, Jose S. Loredo, Karen A. Adler, Joel E. Dimsdale,