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Journal Article

Citation

Aasvang GM, Overland B, Ursin R, Moum T. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 2011; 129(6): 3716.

Affiliation

Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Division of Environmental Medicine, Department of Air Pollution and Noise, Box 4404 Nydalen, N-0403 Oslo, Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, American Institute of Physics)

DOI

10.1121/1.3583547

PMID

21682396

Abstract

The aim of this study was to explore and compare the effect of noise from railway and road traffic on sleep in subjects habitually exposed to nocturnal noise. Forty young and middle aged healthy subjects were studied with polysomnography (PSG) during two consecutive nights in their own bedroom. Noise measurements and recordings were conducted concurrently outside of the bedroom façade as well as inside the bedroom of each participant. Different noise exposure parameters were calculated (L(p,A,eq,night), L(p,A,Fmax,night), and L(AF5,night)) and analyzed in relation to whole-night sleep parameters. The group exposed to railway noise had significantly less Rapid eye movement, (REM) sleep than the group exposed to road traffic noise. A significant association was found between the maximum level (L(p,A,Fmax,night)) of railway noise and time spent in REM sleep. REM sleep was significantly shorter in the group exposed to at least a single railway noise event above 50 dB inside the bedroom. These results, obtained in an ecological valid setting, support previous laboratory findings that railway noise has a stronger impact than road traffic noise on physiological parameters during sleep, and that the maximum noise level is an important predictor of noise effects on sleep assessed by PSG, at least for railway noise.


Language: en

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