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Dim light, sleep tight, and wake up bright: Sleep optimization in athletes by means of light regulation

Authors :
Knufinke, M.
Nieuwenhuys, A.
Geurts, S.A.E.
Møst, E.I.S.
Moen, M.H.
Maase, K.
Coenen, A.M.L.
Gordijn, M.C.M.
Kompier, M.A.J.
Knufinke, M.
Nieuwenhuys, A.
Geurts, S.A.E.
Møst, E.I.S.
Moen, M.H.
Maase, K.
Coenen, A.M.L.
Gordijn, M.C.M.
Kompier, M.A.J.
Source :
European Journal of Sport Science; 7; 15; 1746-1391; 1; vol. 21; ~European Journal of Sport Science~7~15~~~1746-1391~1~21~~
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 219551.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)<br />Despite an elevated recovery need, research indicates that athletes often exhibit relatively poor sleep. Timing and consolidation of sleep is driven by the circadian system, which requires periodic light-dark exposure for stable entrainment to the 24-hour day, but is often disturbed due to underexposure to light in the morning (e.g., low-level indoor lighting) and overexposure to light in the evening (e.g., environmental and screen-light). This study examined whether combining fixed sleep schedules with light regulation leads to more consolidated sleep. Morning light exposure was increased using light-emitting goggles, whereas evening light exposure was reduced using amber-lens glasses. Using a within-subject crossover design, twenty-six athletes (14 female, 12 male) were randomly assigned to start the intervention with the light-regulation-week or the no light-regulation-week. Sleep was monitored by means of sleep diaries and actigraphy. Due to low protocol adherence regarding the fixed sleep-wake schedules, two datasets were constructed; one including athletes who kept a strict sleep-wake schedule (N = 8), and one that also included athletes with a more lenient sleep-wake schedule (N = 25). In case of a lenient sleep-wake schedule, light regulation improved self-reported sleep onset latency (delta SOL = 8 minutes). This effect was stronger (delta SOL = 17 minutes) and complemented by enhanced subjective sleep quality in case of a strict sleep-wake schedule. None of the actigraphy-based estimates differed significantly between conditions. To conclude, light regulation may be considered a potentially effective strategy to improve subjective sleep, but less obtrusive methods should be explored to increase protocol compliance.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
European Journal of Sport Science; 7; 15; 1746-1391; 1; vol. 21; ~European Journal of Sport Science~7~15~~~1746-1391~1~21~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284023938
Document Type :
Electronic Resource