Abstract
Study Objectives: In young adults performing compulsory military service, fatigue and somnolence are common and presumably associated with objective or self-reported sleep deprivation. We aimed to find out whether objective sleep parameters from ambulatory polysomnography could explain their self-reported tiredness and sleepiness and whether habits were associated with sleep parameters or tiredness. Methods: Seventy (67 male, age 18-24 years) participants had their sleep assessed with polysomnography. Their self-reported symptoms and demographic data were obtained from online survey including Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Beck's Depression Inventory, items from Basic Nordic Sleep Questionnaire, Internet Addiction Scale, and lifestyle questions. Results: Snoring (audio recording, percentage of total sleep time) was associated with self-reported sleepiness (P = .010) and tiredness (P = .030) and snoring seemed to, partially, explain sleepiness (P = .029). Twenty-six percent of the conscripts had self-reported sleep deprivation (mismatch between reported need for sleep and reported sleep). Self-reported sleep deprivation was significantly associated with somnolence (P = .016) and fatigue (P = .026). Smartphone usage, both average time (P = .022) and frequency of usage (P = .0093) before bedtime, was associated with shorter total sleep time. On average, objective sleep time was rather short (7 hours, 6 minutes), sleep efficiency high (94.9%), proportion of N3 sleep high (27.7%), and sleep latency brief (9 minutes)-suggesting that many of the conscripts might have chronic partial sleep deprivation. Conclusions: Snoring might predispose to tiredness in presumably healthy young adults. Conscripts may have partial sleep deprivation.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of clinical sleep medicine |
Volume | 19 |
Issue number | 2 |
Pages (from-to) | 243-251 |
Number of pages | 9 |
ISSN | 1550-9389 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Feb 2023 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Fields of Science
- Conscript service
- Military
- Polysomnography
- Sleep deprivation
- Snoring
- Somnolence
- Tiredness
- 3112 Neurosciences