We investigated the effect of sleep deprivation on postural control during a simple reaction time task (SRT), during a task requiring the intermittent inhibition of a reaction (IRT), and in the absence of a concurrent information processing task. Postural sway, i.e. changes in center of pressure on a force platform, was recorded in three increasingly difficult standing conditions (fixed platform, sway-referenced platform and sway-referenced platform with sway-referenced visual scene) during the three information-processing task conditions. Five healthy subjects performed the tasks either after normal sleep or following 24 h of sustained wakefulness. As hypothesized, sleep deprivation significantly increased postural sway only in the IRT condition. Within the IRT condition, sleep deprivation significantly increased sway across all postural conditions.
Alexandros N. Vgontzas, Dimitris A. Papanicolaou, Edward O. Bixler, Angela Lotsikas, Keith Zachman, Anthony Kales, Paolo Prolo, Ma‐Li Wong, Júlio Licinio, Philip W. Gold, Ramon C Hermida, George Mastorakos, George Chrousos
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