Characterizing behavioral sleep using actigraphy in adult dogs of various ages fed once or twice daily

Adult dogs possess strong diurnal locomotor activity/rest rhythms, and sleep/wake patterns have been characterized. However, behavioral sleep/wake data are lacking related to aging and daily feeding pattern. Three groups (young adults [Y], 1.5–4.5 years; middle-aged adults [M], 7–9 years; and senior...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of veterinary behavior Vol. 8; no. 4; pp. 195 - 203
Main Authors Zanghi, Brian M., Kerr, Wendell, Gierer, John, de Rivera, Christina, Araujo, Joseph A., Milgram, Norton W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.07.2013
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Summary:Adult dogs possess strong diurnal locomotor activity/rest rhythms, and sleep/wake patterns have been characterized. However, behavioral sleep/wake data are lacking related to aging and daily feeding pattern. Three groups (young adults [Y], 1.5–4.5 years; middle-aged adults [M], 7–9 years; and senior, 11–14 years) of beagles (N = 48) wore the Actiwatch activity monitoring system (Respironics Co., Inc., Bend, OR) for 3 days while housed indoors with 12-hour light/dark schedule and fed once or twice daily. Actiware-Rhythm software (version 5.52; Respironics Co., Inc., Bend, OR) was used to estimate behavioral sleep or wake from locomotor activity data. All dogs demonstrated diurnal sleeping patterns. Total wake minutes during the light phase declined with age (P < 0.05) and differed by 7.7% and 10.2% for middle-aged adults and seniors, respectively, compared with young adults. Further analysis revealed that increased light phase nap bouts (P < 0.008), not increased nap duration, caused this decline. Total sleep minutes during the night increased with age, as middle-aged adults and seniors slept at least 38 (P = 0.01) more minutes than young adults. Increased sleep time at night resulted from a longer sleep interval duration (P = 0.05), delayed morning activity onset time (P = 0.02), and marginally fewer waking bouts (P = 0.07). Independent of age, twice-daily feeding significantly influenced daytime sleeping patterns but did not affect total minutes recorded as sleep during the day. Interestingly, napping bouts decreased significantly (P = 0.01) and napping duration increased (P = 0.0001) when fed twice-daily. Twice-daily feeding was also associated with earlier sleep onset time at night and onset of morning activity, as well as shortened sleep interval. Clear changes in behavioral sleep patterns were observed with age and daily feeding schedule.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jveb.2012.10.007
ISSN:1558-7878
DOI:10.1016/j.jveb.2012.10.007