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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Circadian distribution of sleep phases after major abdominal surgery

TLDR
Patients have significantly increased REM sleep, LS, and reduced time awake during the daytime period after surgery compared with before surgery, suggesting disturbances in the circadian regulation of the sleep-wake cycle may be involved in the development of postoperative sleep disturbances.
Abstract
Background It is believed that the severely disturbed night-time sleep architecture after surgery is associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity with rebound of rapid eye movement (REM). The daytime sleep pattern of patients after major general surgery has not been investigated before. We decided to study the circadian distribution of sleep phases before and after surgery. Methods Eleven patients undergoing elective major abdominal surgery were included in the study. Continuous ambulatory polysomnographic monitoring was made 24 h before surgery and 36 h after surgery, thus including two nights after operation. Sleep was scored independently by two blinded observers and the recordings were reported as awake, light sleep (LS, stages I and II), slow wave sleep (SWS, stages III and IV), and REM sleep. Results There was significantly increased REM sleep ( P =0.046), LS ( P =0.020), and reduced time awake ( P =0.016) in the postoperative daytime period compared with the preoperative daytime period. Five patients had REM sleep during the daytime after surgery. Three of these patients did not have REM sleep during the preceding postoperative night. There was significantly reduced night-time REM sleep for two nights after surgery compared with before surgery ( P =0.001). Conclusions Patients have significantly increased REM sleep, LS, and reduced time awake during the daytime period after surgery compared with before surgery. Disturbances in the circadian regulation of the sleep–wake cycle may be involved in the development of postoperative sleep disturbances.

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Citations
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Postoperative sleep disruptions: A potential catalyst of acute pain?

TL;DR: A better understanding of the effect of postoperative sleep disruptions on pain perception would help in selecting patients at risk for more severe pain and may facilitate the development of more effective and safer pain management programs.
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Sleep in the ICU: potential mechanisms and clinical implications.

TL;DR: This paper reviewed the literature describing sleep in ICU patients, including recent investigations in patients who require mechanical ventilation, factors that affect sleep in critically ill patients, and the potential mechanisms and clinical implications of disturbed sleep in the ICU setting with directions to consider for future investigations.

Systematic review of sleep disorders in cancer patients: can the prevalence of sleep disorders be ascertained?

TL;DR: Challenging the current paradigm of the way sleep is studied in cancer could produce better clinical screening tools for use in oncology clinics leading to better triaging of patients with sleep complaints to sleep specialists, and overall improvement in sleep quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic review of sleep disorders in cancer patients: can the prevalence of sleep disorders be ascertained?

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate if the prevalence of sleep disorders in cancer could be ascertained from the current body of literature regarding sleep in cancer, which was a critical and systematic review of peer-reviewed, English-language, original articles published from 1980 through 15 October 2013.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep disturbances after fast-track hip and knee arthroplasty

TL;DR: Despite ultra-short LOS and provision of spinal anaesthesia with multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia, REM sleep was almost eliminated on the first postoperative night after fast-track orthopaedic surgery but returned to pre-admission levels when at home on the fourth postoperativeNight.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Manual of Standardized Terminology, Techniques and Scoring System for Sleep Stages of Human Subjects.

TL;DR: Techniques of recording, scoring, and doubtful records are carefully considered, and Recommendations for abbreviations, types of pictorial representation, order of polygraphic tracings are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sympathetic-Nerve Activity during Sleep in Normal Subjects

TL;DR: REM sleep is associated with profound sympathetic activation in normal subjects, possibly linked to changes in muscle tone and the hemodynamic and sympathetic changes during REM sleep could play a part in triggering ischemic events in patients with vascular disease.
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Patients have significantly increased REM sleep, LS, and reduced time awake during the daytime period after surgery compared with before surgery.