EEG Brain Rhythms During Resting-State Wakefulness and Sleep in Elderly Expert Meditators.
Journal of sleep research – July 29, 2025
Source: PubMed
Summary
Expert meditators aged around 70 showed significant differences in sleep and brain activity compared to meditation-naive peers. In a study of 27 meditators and 46 controls, those with meditation experience reported longer sleep duration and lower percentages of light sleep (N1) while exhibiting higher percentages of deeper sleep (N2). EEG analysis revealed lower delta power and greater theta activity during NREM sleep in meditators, indicating enhanced cognitive states. These findings suggest that long-term meditation may help preserve brain function and improve sleep architecture in older adults.
Abstract
Meditation practice has been shown to impact resting-state EEG activity in expert meditators, but its benefits on sleep, which is particularly affected with age, are poorly understood. Our aim was to better understand the effects of long-term meditation practice on resting-state EEG and sleep in older adults. Twenty-seven elderly expert meditators (mean age ± SD: 70.7 ± 5.0 years) were compared to meditation-naive controls (69.3 ± 3.8 years) for sleep questionnaires (n = 135), polysomnography (n = 47) and resting-state EEG (n = 73). Sleep microstructure (slow waves and spindles) and EEG features (power, Kolmogorov complexity and permutation entropy (PE)) during resting-state, NREM, and REM sleep were compared between groups. Correlations were tested between the metrics that differed between the two groups and the level of meditation expertise within the meditator group. At rest, expert meditators exhibited lower delta power and higher delta PE than controls. Self-reported sleep quality did not differ between groups, but expert meditators slept longer, had reduced %N1, and higher %N2. During NREM sleep, they exhibited reduced delta power, increased alpha power, and greater theta PE. During REM sleep, they tended to show greater theta power. Finally, the composite score of meditation expertise was negatively associated with %N1, and tended to be positively associated with %N2 and REM sleep theta power. Overall, these results suggest that expert meditators showed more preserved brain activity at rest and sleep architecture, and exhibited EEG features suggesting higher cognitive states during NREM sleep. Clinical Trial Information: Name: Study in Cognitively Intact Seniors Aiming to Assess the Effects of Meditation Training (Age-Well). Registration: EudraCT: 2016-002441-36; IDRCB: 2016-A01767-44; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02977819. (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02977819?term=Age-Well&draw=2&rank=1).