Extreme sports performance for more than a week with severely fractured sleep

Sleep Breath. 2021 Jun;25(2):951-955. doi: 10.1007/s11325-020-02172-4. Epub 2020 Sep 10.

Abstract

Purpose: Severely fractured sleep is mostly portrayed negatively, but investigations in extreme sports show that humans can maintain performance with a minimum of sleep. With two cases of long-lasting extreme sports performances, we demonstrate that severely fragmented sleep does not necessarily lead to a deterioration of physical and cognitive performance.

Methods: We performed continuous polysomnography on a 34 year-old skier for 11 days and nights during a world record attempt in long-term downhill skiing and monitored a 32 year-old cyclist during the Race Across America for 8.5 days via sleep and activity logs.

Results: The skier slept fractured fashion in 15-16 naps with a daily average of 6 h consisting of 77% in sleep stage 1 and 2, 11% in stage 3, and 13% in stage REM. The cyclist slept a total of 7 h and 52 min in 8.5 days, split up into 11 short naps and 6 sleep periods. The average duration of napping was 8.8 min and of sleep 64.2 min.

Conclusions: These two cases demonstrate that outstanding performances are possible with severely fractured sleep and/or sleep deprivation. In well-trained athletes, breaking new recordsis possible despite extreme sleep habits.

Keywords: Bicycling; Extreme sleep fragmentation; Polysomnography; Skiing; Sleep diary.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Athletic Performance / statistics & numerical data*
  • Humans
  • Polysomnography
  • Sleep Deprivation
  • Sleep*
  • Time Factors