Authors
Charelle Bottenheft, Koen Hogenelst, Ivo Stuldreher, Robert Kleemann, Eric Groen, Jan van Erp, Anne-Marie Brouwer
Publication date
2023/12/1
Journal
Brain, Behavior, & Immunity-Health
Volume
34
Pages
100706
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
Sleep deprivation (SD) and acute social stress are common, often unavoidable, and frequently co-occurring stressors in high-risk professions. Both stressors are known to acutely induce inflammatory responses and an increasing body of literature suggests this may lead to cognitive impairment. This study examined the combined effects of total SD and acute social stress on cognitive performance and took a comprehensive approach to explore their (shared) underlying mechanism leading to cognitive decline.
Method
We recorded cognitive performance on a response inhibition task and a multitask and monitored a range of inflammatory, psychophysiological and self-reported markers in 101 participants, both before and after one night of either sleep (control group: N = 48) or SD (N = 53), and both before and after a social stressor (Trier Social Stress Test).
Results
SD decreased cognitive performance. The …
Total citations
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