Acute Heroin Abstinence in Man. 3. Effect Upon Waking and Slow Wave Sleep

reportActive / Technical Report | Accession Number: ADA094316 | Open PDF

Abstract:

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of acute heroin withdrawal on waking behavior and slow wave sleep. Data were collected from drug-dependent patients who were using pure heroin and from drug-free controls. All data were recorded on a 24-hour per day basis for 5-7 consecutive days. EEG records were manually scored according to standard criteria. The heroin-dependent patients during withdrawal showed approximately a 26 decrease in slow wave sleep and an 18 increase in waking behavior. The awake state in the heroin-dependent patients during withdrawal also displayed an increase in number of episodes and number of state shifts, and a decrease in duration and sleep onset latency. In addition, the slow wave sleep categories during withdrawal generally showed an increase in sleep onset latency and interstate interval and a decrease in number of episodes. These results indicate that heroin withdrawal is associated with a marked disruption of the central nervous system mechanisms responsible for maintenance of the normal sleep-waking cycle. Analyses of the pattern of this disruption will further aid in understanding the withdrawal syndrome.

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