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A manual of standardized terminology, techniques and scoring system for sleep stages of human subjects
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The article was published on 1968-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 11993 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sleep Stages & Hypnogram.read more
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cycle length of periodic breathing in patients with and without heart failure.
TL;DR: Circulatory delay is an important determinant of hyperpnea length but not of apnea length in patients with ICSA and CSR-CSA, indicating that LECT is a valid measure of circulatory delay.
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Increased 8-isoprostane and interleukin-6 in breath condensate of obstructive sleep apnea patients.
Giovanna Elisiana Carpagnano,Sergei A. Kharitonov,Onofrio Resta,Maria P. Foschino-Barbaro,E. Gramiccioni,Peter J. Barnes +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that inflammation and oxidative stress are characteristic in the airways of OSA patients but not in obese subjects, and that their levels depend on the severity of the OSA.
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Predictive value of clinical features for the obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome
TL;DR: The advantage of being a National Referral Centre for patients with suspected obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) was used to seek clinical factors predictive of OSA, and thus determine if the number of polysomnography tests required could be reduced.
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A revised glossary of terms most commonly used by clinical electroencephalographers and updated proposal for the report format of the EEG findings. Revision 2017.
Nick Kane,Jayant N. Acharya,Sandor Benickzy,Luis Caboclo,Simon Finnigan,Peter W. Kaplan,Hiroshi Shibasaki,Ronit M. Pressler,Michel J.A.M. van Putten +8 more
TL;DR: This glossary is based on the previous proposals and includes terms necessary to describe the EEG and to generate the EEG report and includes the terms most commonly used in clinical EEG.
Journal ArticleDOI
Subjective sleepiness correlates negatively with global alpha (8–12 Hz) and positively with central frontal theta (4–8 Hz) frequencies in the human resting awake electroencephalogram
TL;DR: The notion that sleepiness is directly represented in the awake EEG is supported, with strong negative correlations of alpha (8-12 Hz) power with subjective sleepiness at all scalp locations, suggesting a negative association between sleepiness and general cortical activation.