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non-rapid eye movement sleep

(… RA-pid I MOOV-ment sleep)
The phase of sleep that is considered the quiet or restful phase. During the three stages of non-rapid eye movement sleep, a person falls asleep and then moves from a light sleep into a deep sleep. This is when a person’s brain activity, breathing, and heart rate slow down, body temperature drops, muscles relax, and eye movements stop. Non-rapid eye movement sleep plays an important role in helping the body repair tissues, build bone and muscle, and strengthen its immune system. During normal sleep, a person goes through four to five sleep cycles that last about 90 minutes each and include both non-rapid eye movement sleep and REM sleep. Also called non-REM sleep and NREM sleep.
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