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Acute sleep deprivation elevates brain and body temperature in rats.

Lal Chandra VishwakarmaBinney SharmaVishwajeet SinghAshok Kumar JaryalHruda Nanda Mallick
Published in: Journal of sleep research (2020)
Available sleep deprivation studies lack data on simultaneous changes in hypothalamic, cortical and body temperature during sleep deprivation and recovery. Ten adult male Wistar rats chronically implanted with electroencephalogram, electro-oculogram and electromyogram electrodes for recording sleep were used in this study. Hypothalamic and cortical temperatures were measured by pre-implanted thermocouples. A radio transmitter (TA10TAF-40, DSI USA) was implanted intraperitoneally to measure body temperature. All the temperatures were measured simultaneously at 15-s intervals during baseline conditions, sleep deprivation and recovery sleep. Sleep deprivation was carried out for 24 hr by the gentle handling method; however, sleep and temperature were only recorded during the first 12 hr of deprivation. During sleep deprivation the body, hypothalamic and cortical temperatures increased significantly as compared to baseline. During recovery sleep, body and cortical temperature recovered earlier than the hypothalamic temperature. Hypothalamic temperature remained higher than the baseline values throughout 12 hr of recovery sleep. In the recovery sleep, cortical temperature decreased immediately and reached near baseline by 4 hr. We observed a quicker return of cortical temperature towards control temperature during recovery sleep compared with hypothalamic and body temperature. The results of the present study show that acute sleep deprivation results in a rise in both cortical and hypothalamic temperature, along with body temperature. A rise in cortical temperature may be a contributing factor for cognitive dysfunction resulting from sleep deprivation.
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