Diet/energy balance affect sleep and wakefulness independent of body weight

IJ Perron, AI Pack, S Veasey - Sleep, 2015 - academic.oup.com
IJ Perron, AI Pack, S Veasey
Sleep, 2015academic.oup.com
Abstract Study Objectives: Excessive daytime sleepiness commonly affects obese people,
even in those without sleep apnea, yet its causes remain uncertain. We sought to determine
whether acute dietary changes could induce or rescue wake impairments independent of
body weight. Design: We implemented a novel feeding paradigm that generates two groups
of mice with equal body weight but opposing energetic balance. Two subsets of mice
consuming either regular chow (RC) or high-fat diet (HFD) for 8 w were switched to the …
Study Objectives
Excessive daytime sleepiness commonly affects obese people, even in those without sleep apnea, yet its causes remain uncertain. We sought to determine whether acute dietary changes could induce or rescue wake impairments independent of body weight.
Design
We implemented a novel feeding paradigm that generates two groups of mice with equal body weight but opposing energetic balance. Two subsets of mice consuming either regular chow (RC) or high-fat diet (HFD) for 8 w were switched to the opposite diet for 1 w. Sleep recordings were conducted at Week 0 (baseline), Week 8 (pre-diet switch), and Week 9 (post-diet switch) for all groups. Sleep homeostasis was measured at Week 8 and Week 9.
Participants
Young adult, male C57BL/6J mice.
Measurements and Results
Differences in total wake, nonrapid eye movement (NREM), and rapid eye movement (REM) time were quantified, in addition to changes in bout fragmentation/consolidation. At Week 9, the two diet switch groups had similar body weight. However, animals switched to HFD (and thus gaining weight) had decreased wake time, increased NREM sleep time, and worsened sleep/wake fragmentation compared to mice switched to RC (which were in weight loss). These effects were driven by significant sleep/wake changes induced by acute dietary manipulations (Week 8 → Week 9). Sleep homeostasis, as measured by delta power increase following sleep deprivation, was unaffected by our feeding paradigm.
Conclusions
Acute dietary manipulations are sufficient to alter sleep and wakefulness independent of body weight and without effects on sleep homeostasis.
Oxford University Press