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Showing papers on "Sleep disorder published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Prior insomnia remained a significant predictor of subsequent major depression when history of other prior depressive symptoms was controlled for, and complaints of 2 weeks or more of insomnia nearly every night might be a useful marker of subsequent onset of major depression.

1,670 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The correlation between factor scores corroborated the hypothesis that childhood sleep disturbances are not independent entities nor do they cluster into different groupings related to each other and appears to be a useful tool in evaluating the sleep disturbances of school‐age children in clinical and non‐clinical populations.
Abstract: To attempt a categorization of sleep disorders in children, we developed a 27 item Likert-type rating scale (Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children: SDSC) and assessed the psychometric properties was developed. The scale was distributed to the mothers of 1304 children (1157 controls, mean age 9.8 y; 147 sleep disorder subjects, mean age 9.2y, composed of four clinical groups: Insomnia 39 subjects, Hypersomnia 12 subjects, Respiratory disturbances during sleep 25 subjects and Parasomnias 71 subjects). The internal consistency was high in controls (0.79) and remained at a satisfactory level in sleep disorder subjects (0.71); the test/retest reliability was adequate for the total (r = 0.71) and single item scores. The factor analysis (variance explained 44.21%) yielded six factors which represented the most common areas of sleep disorders in childhood and adolescence. Enuresis was the only item with a factor loading lower than 0.40 and with a low inter-item correlation and was therefore eliminated, resulting in a final scale of 26 items. The re-evaluation of the sample, using the factor scores, supported the validity and the discriminating capacity of the scales between controls and the four clinical groups. The correlation between factor scores corroborated the hypothesis that childhood sleep disturbances are not independent entities nor do they cluster into different groupings related to each other. The SDSC appears to be a useful tool in evaluating the sleep disturbances of school-age children in clinical and non-clinical populations.

883 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assessed 1488 patients with rheumatic disease with the Clinical Health Assessment Questionnaire, a health status instrument with scales for fatigue, pain, global severity, sleep disturbance, gastrointestinal problems, anxiety, depression, health status, health satisfaction, and work ability.
Abstract: Objective. To determine the prevalence of fatigue in rheumatic disease ; to characterize the strength of associations between demographic and clinical features and fatigue ; to identify predictors of fatigue, and to determine the consequence of clinically significant fatigue. Methods. 1488 consecutive patients with rheumatic disease were assessed with the Clinical Health Assessment Questionnaire, a health status instrument with scales for fatigue, pain, global severity, sleep disturbance, gastrointestinal problems, anxiety, depression, health status, health satisfaction, and work ability. All patients underwent rheumatic disease examinations and laboratory testing. Results. Fatigue measured by visual analog scale (VAS) was present in 88-98% of patients, but clinically important levels of fatigue (≥ 2.0 on VAS) were present in more than 41% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or osteoarthritis (OA) and 76% of those with fibromyalgia (FM). Fatigue was related to almost all demographic and clinical variables, but in multivariate analyses the strongest independent predictors of fatigue were pain, sleep disturbance, depression, tender point count and Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) disability. About 90% of the R 2 of the model (all patients=0.51, RA=0.49, OA=0.45, FM=0.41) was explained by pain, sleep disturbance, and depression. In RA assessed by erythrocyte sedimentation rate, joint count and grip strength, no association of the inflammatory process with fatigue could be found in the multivariate analyses. In measuring health status, fatigue was strongly associated with work dysfunction and general measures of health (VAS of global severity, health status, and health satisfaction). Conclusion. Fatigue is common across all rheumatic diseases, associates with all measures of distress, and is a predictor of work dysfunction and overall health status. The correlates of fatigue are generally similar across RA, OA and FM. Fatigue assessment adds much to understanding and management of patients and diseases.

591 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1996-Stroke
TL;DR: Patients with stroke have an increased incidence of obstructive sleep apnea compared with normal sex- and age-matched control subjects, which may have predisposed these patients to stroke.
Abstract: Background and Purpose We aimed to prospectively determine whether the incidence of obstructive sleep apnea in patients with recent stroke was significantly different from that of a sex- and age-matched control group with no major medical problems. Methods We prospectively performed overnight polysomnography in 24 patients with a recent stroke (13 men and 11 women; mean age [±SD], 64.6±10.4 years) and 27 subjects without stroke (13 men and 14 women; mean age, 61.6±8.8 years). Patients with either ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke were entered into this study. Polysomnographic evaluations were performed within approximately 2 to 5 weeks after each patient’s stroke. Results Obstructive sleep apnea was found in 10 of 13 men with stroke (77%) and in only 3 of 13 male subjects without stroke (23%) (P=.0169). Seven of 11 women with stroke (64%) had obstructive sleep apnea, while only 2 of 14 female subjects without stroke (14%) had obstructive sleep apnea (P=.0168). For men with stroke, the mean apnea/hypopnea ind...

545 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that CSR itself accelerates the deterioration in cardiac function as well as mortality in patients with congestive heart failure who develop Cheyne-Stokes respiration during sleep.
Abstract: We hypothesized that mortality is higher in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) who develop Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) during sleep than CHF patients without CSR. Overnight polysomnography was performed on 16 male patients with chronic, stable CHF: nine had CSR during sleep (CSR group) and seven did not (CHF group). The CSR group had a higher apnea-hypopnea index (AHI: 41 +/- 17 versus 6 +/- 5/hr) and experienced greater sleep disruption. There were no significant intergroup differences between age, weight, cardiac function, and pulmonary function. After the initial sleep study, all patients were maintained on standard medical therapy for CHF without supplemental oxygen or nasal continuous positive airway pressure. Over the next 3.1 to 4.5 yr there was a significant difference between the number of deaths in each group. Five patients died in the CSR group and two received a heart transplant, whereas only one patient died in the CHF group. Regression analysis revealed that mortality was positively correlated with CSR, AHI, arousal index, and the amount of stage 1, 2 non-REM sleep and was inversely related to the total sleep time. We conclude that mortality is higher in CHF patients who develop CSR during sleep than CHF patients without CSR. Although the development of CSR may simply reflect more severe cardiac impairment, we suggest that CSR itself accelerates the deterioration in cardiac function.

463 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The PMB recorder was useful for precisely evaluating the relationship between blood pressure and environmental factors and suggest that lack of sleep may increase sympathetic nervous system activity on the following day, leading to increased blood pressure.
Abstract: Blood pressure varies in relation to factors such as physical activity, body position, ambient temperature, and autonomic nervous system activity. Therefore, we have developed a portable multibiomedical (PMB) recorder that monitors five parameters: indirect blood pressure, physical activity, body position, ambient temperature, and RR interval of the electrocardiogram. In the present study, we applied the PMB recorder over a 24-hour period to study the effect of insufficient sleep on blood pressure in subjects doing extensive overtime work. The parameters listed above were measured by the PMB recorder throughout a normal workday (mean period of sleep, 8 hours) and throughout a day with insufficient sleep (mean period of sleep, 3.6 hours) in 18 male technical workers aged 23 to 48 years old. Blood pressure (mean systolic/diastolic pressure±SD) significantly increased the day after a sleep-insufficient night (129±8/79±6 mm Hg) compared with the day after a normal night (123±8/76±7 mm Hg, P P P

449 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 1996-Chest
TL;DR: It is concluded that OA is an effective treatment in some patients with mild-moderate OSA and is associated with fewer side effects and greater patient satisfaction than N-CPAP.

436 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Significantly increased risk for mortality was observed in patients with RLS at the 2.5-year follow-up and Symptoms of RLS, sleep onset latency, and transferrin saturation were independently associated with premature discontinuation of dialysis.

410 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: A low family income, being a woman, being over 65 years of age, being retired and being separated, divorced or widowed are significantly associated with the presence of UQS, and the consumption of sleep-enhancing medication and medication to reduce anxiety is important.
Abstract: This study was conducted with a representative sample of the French population of 5,622 subjects of 15 years old or more. The telephone interviews were performed with EVAL, an expert system specialized for the evaluation of sleep disorders. From this sample, 20.1% of persons said that they were unsatisfied with their sleep or taking medication for sleeping difficulties or anxiety with sleeping difficulties (UQS). A low family income, being a woman, being over 65 years of age, being retired and being separated, divorced or widowed are significantly associated with the presence of UQS. A sleep onset period over 15 minutes, a short night's sleep and regular nighttime awakenings are also associated with UQS. Medical consultations during the past 6 months and physical illnesses are more frequent among the UQS group. The consumption of sleep-enhancing medication and medication to reduce anxiety is important: in the past, 16% of subjects had taken a sleep-enhancing medication and 16.2% a medication to reduce anxiety. At the time of the survey 9.9% of the population were using sleep-enhancing medication and 6.7% were using medication for anxiety. For most, hypnotic consumption was long-term: 81.6% had been using it for more than 6 months.

382 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: After adenotonsillectomy the SBD group showed a significant reduction in aggression, inattention and hyperactivity on the parent Conners scale, and an improvement in vigilance on the Continuous Performance Test, and the snorer group improved showing less hyperactive behaviour than pre-operatively and better vigilance.
Abstract: Children on the adenotonsillectomy waiting list aged 6 years or more were screened by questionnaire and overnight sleep monitoring to identify 12 with a moderate sleep and breathing disorder (SBD) group. They were matched by age and sex with 11 children who had a similar history of snoring and sleep disturbance but without an obvious sleep and breathing problem when monitored (snorer group) and also with a group of ten children most of whom were refered for an unrelated surgical procedure (control group). All children were studied before and 3–6 months after surgery. Pre-operatively the SBD and snorer groups both had significantly more restless sleep than the control group. The SBD group also had significantly more (>4%) dips in oxygen saturation than the other two groups. After surgery there were no longer any significant differences between the three groups. After adenotonsillectomy the SBD group showed a significant reduction in aggression, inattention and hyperactivity on the parent Conners scale, and an improvement in vigilance on the Continuous Performance Test. The snorer group also improved showing less hyperactive behaviour than pre-operatively and better vigilance. The control groups's behaviour and performance did not change significantly. There were no significant changes in the performance of the Matching Familiar Figures Test in any of the groups.

364 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Females reported significantly poorer quality of sleep, longer sleep latencies, more nighttime awakenings, less frequent napping, and more frequent use of sedative-hypnotic drugs when compared to males, according to this cross-sectionally examined study.
Abstract: BACKGROUND This epidemiologic study cross-sectionally examined the effects of sex and age on subjective characteristics of sleep and the factors related to self-evaluated sleep quality in a Dutch noninstitutionalized elderly population. METHODS 1,692 sleep questionnaires were mailed to all attenders of the general practice serving Krimpen aan de Lek, The Netherlands, aged 50 or over. Both target population and responders (1,485 subjects) were virtually representative of the Dutch population regarding sex and age (50 +) characteristics. RESULTS Overall, females reported significantly poorer quality of sleep, longer sleep latencies, more nighttime awakenings, less frequent napping, and more frequent use of sedative-hypnotic drugs when compared to males. Additionally, there was a female predominance in the prevalence of disturbed sleep onset and sleep maintenance, whereas a male predominance was observed in the prevalence of excessive daytime sleepiness. Across subjects, a significant age-related increment was found for sleep latency time and time spent in bed. The number of nighttime awakenings increased significantly with age only in males. No significant correlations were found between health status and sex, age, or subjective sleep quality. The most frequently reported causes of disturbed sleep onset and sleep maintenance were worries and nocturia, respectively. Subjective quality of sleep was mostly associated with self-estimated sleep latency. CONCLUSIONS Our findings extend those of previous epidemiologic studies reporting that sleep disorders are common in the general elderly population. Future studies should further elucidate the nature and extent of geriatric sleep disorders to satisfy the increasing need for its accurate diagnosis and treatment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The three states of mammalian being--wakefulness, REM sleep, and NREM sleep--are not mutually exclusive and may occur simultaneously, oscillate rapidly, or appear in dissociated or incomplete form to produce primary sleep parasomnias.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, a community-based study of the natural history of sleep apnea, to determine whether women with sleep disorders have unique symptoms or complaints.
Abstract: Background: Population-based studies have shown that sleep apnea is underdiagnosed in women, relative to men. One hypothesis for this gender bias is that women with sleep apnea are missed because clinical guidelines for the evaluation and diagnosis of sleep apnea, established primarily on men, are not valid for women. In this investigation, data from the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, a community-based study of the natural history of sleep apnea, were used to determine whether women with sleep apnea have unique symptoms or complaints. Methods: The sample comprised 551 men and 388 women, none of whom had ever been given a diagnosis of sleep apnea. Data on typical sleep apnea symptoms and other factors were obtained by interview and survey. Sleep apnea status was determined from the frequency of apneic and hypopneic events during sleep as recorded by in-laboratory, whole-night polysomnography. The sensitivity and relative predictive power of each symptom or factor for sleep apnea at different severity levels were calculated and compared by gender. Results: Regardless of severity level, women with sleep apnea did not report symptoms that differed significantly from those of men with the same level of sleep apnea. For men and women, snoring was the most sensitive and strongest predictor of sleep apnea. Conclusions: Current clinical indications for sleep apnea evaluation are as appropriate for women as they are for men. Other reasons for the gender disparity in sleep apnea diagnosis, including the possibility that health care providers disregard typical symptoms in women, should be pursued. Arch Intern Med. 1996;156:2445-2451

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: Surgical and nonsurgical approaches to weight loss have been evaluated, although most studies to date suffer from methodological limitations including lack of random assignment to treatment groups, confounding of treatment interventions, absence of untreated controls and lack of adequate follow-up assessment.
Abstract: Clinic-based and epidemiological studies demonstrate a strong association between obesity and obstructive sleep apnea. However, defining the causal relationship between excess body weight and sleep-disordered breathing remains difficult. Potential mechanisms to be considered include: (1) alterations in upper airway structure; (2) alterations in upper airway function; (3) alterations in the balance between ventilatory drive and load and (4) obesity-induced hypoxemia. Additional evidence for the role of obesity in obstructive sleep apnea comes from clinical studies of weight loss in patients with sleep-disordered breathing. Significant weight loss has been reported in most studies, which has been associated with varying degrees of improvement in sleep-disordered breathing, oxygen hemoglobin saturation, sleep architecture and daytime performance. Surgical and nonsurgical approaches to weight loss have been evaluated, although most studies to date suffer from methodological limitations including lack of random assignment to treatment groups, confounding of treatment interventions, absence of untreated controls and lack of adequate follow-up assessment. Implications for research and clinical practice are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: With the rapid increase in the elderly population, the practicing physician should be aware of the changes in sleep–wake patterns that accompany normal aging, the various sleep disorders.
Abstract: DISTURBANCES in the pattern of sleep are common in older adults. These sleep–wake disturbances can be the result of physiologic changes that are apparently part of normal aging, a primary sleep disorder, a secondary sleep problem resulting from one of a variety of causes, or a combination of the three. Sleep disruption often leads older persons to report symptoms of disturbed sleep to their physicians in an attempt to alleviate the disturbance.1 2 3 4 5 With the rapid increase in the elderly population, the practicing physician should be aware of the changes in sleep–wake patterns that accompany normal aging, the various sleep disorders . . .

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that obese children and adolescents have a high prevalence of sleep‐disordered breathing, although in many cases it is mild.
Abstract: Obese adults have an increased prevalence of pulmonary disorders. Although childhood obesity is a common problem, few studies have evaluated the pulmonary complications of obesity in the pediatric population. We, therefore, performed pulmonary function tests (PFTs), polysomnography, and multiple sleep latency tests (MSLTs) in 22 obese children and adolescents [mean age, 10 +/- 5 (SD) years; 73 percent female; 184 +/- 36 percent ideal body weight], none of whom presented because of sleep or respiratory complaints. PFTs were normal in all but two subjects. Ten (46 percent) subjects had abnormal polysomnograms. There was a positive correlation between the degree of obesity and the apnea index (r = 0.47, P < 0.05), and an inverse correlation between the degree of obesity and the Sa0(2) nadir (r = -0.60, P < 0.01). The degree of sleepiness on MSLT correlated with the degree of obesity (r = -0.50, P < 0.05). We conclude that obese children and adolescents have a high prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing, although in many cases it is mild. Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) improved following tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. We recommend that pediatricians have a high index of suspicion for OSAS when evaluating obese patients, and that polysomnography be considered for these patients.

Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Abstract: 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. Patients were mainly primary referrals, from an island population of 3.5 million. Two hundred and fifty consecutive patients underwent clinical assessment, full polysomnography, and a detailed self-administered questionnaire. This represents one of the largest European studies, so far, utilizing full polysomnography. Fifty four percent (n = 134) had polysomnographic evidence of OSA (apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) > or = 15 events.h-1 sleep). Patients with OSA were more likely to be male, and had a significantly greater prevalence of habitual snoring, sleeping supine, wakening with heartburn, and dozing whilst driving. Alcohol intake, age and body mass index (BMI) were significant independent correlates of AHI. After controlling for BMI and age, waist circumference correlated more closely with AHI than neck circumference among males, while the opposite was true among females. No single factor was usefully predictive of obstructive sleep apnoea. However, combining clinical features and oximetry data, where appropriate, approximately one third of patients could be confidently designated as having obstructive sleep apnoea or not. The remaining two thirds of patients would still require more detailed sleep studies, such as full polysomnography, to reach a confident diagnosis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Long-term, nightly benzodiazepine treatment of injurious parasomnias and other disorders of disrupted nocturnal sleep resulted in sustained efficacy in most cases, with low risk of dosage tolerance, adverse effects, or abuse.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: The various mechanisms affecting motor output to the upper airway muscles are reviewed and consideration is given as to how these mechanisms may relate to the normal control of pharyngeal patency awake and asleep and how they may be involved in the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea.
Abstract: Obstructive sleep apnea is a common breathing problem that results in recurrent episodes of nighttime hypoxemia, hypercapnia, bradytachycardia, and hypertension, as well as sleep disturbance and daytime hypersomnolence. The obstruction is located in the oropharynx and is caused by hypotonia of the pharyngeal dilator muscles. In this paper, the various mechanisms affecting motor output to the upper airway muscles are reviewed. In particular, the respiratory function of the pharyngeal dilator muscles, the various reflex mechanisms underlying their control, and the effects of sleep on these mechanisms are discussed. The literature relevant to the central neuronal circuits and neurotransmitters that may be involved in the state-dependent activity of the pharyngeal dilator muscles is also reviewed. In addition to an examination of these basic mechanisms, consideration is given throughout this review as to how these mechanisms may relate to the normal control of pharyngeal patency awake and asleep and how they may be involved in the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnea.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: The variation of MOS scores with sleepiness, unrelated to age or chronic disease, suggests that measures of general health status may be broadly influenced by sleepiness and sleep quality and general health measures may be useful in the evaluations of patients with sleep disorders.
Abstract: One commonly used instrument for evaluating general health and functional status is the medical outcomes survey short form 36 (MOS). Scores obtained from this instrument are known to vary with chronic diseases and depression. However, the degree to which these health dimensions may be influenced by sleep quality or sleepiness is not well understood. A cross-sectional study was performed on the association between general health status, as determined by the MOS, with sleepiness, assessed using a standardized questionnaire [the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS)] and the multiple sleep latency test (MSLT). One hundred twenty-nine subjects (68 women), aged 25-65 years, without severe chronic medical or psychiatric illnesses, underwent an overnight sleep study, followed by an MSLT (consisting of a series of four attempts at napping at 2-hour intervals), and completed the MOS and the ESS. The mean MSLT score was 11 +/- 2 minutes, (range 2-20) and the mean ESS score was 10 +/- 5 (range 0-24). Scores for the MOS dimensions "general health perceptions", "energy/fatigue", and "role limitations due to emotional problems" were correlated significantly with ESS scores (r = -0.30, -0.41, and -0.30, respectively; p values were all < 0.001). The MSLT was also significantly correlated with "energy/fatigue" (r = -0.19; p < 0.05). After considering the effects of chronic illness and/or body mass index in a multiple hierarchical regression analysis, sleepiness, as assessed by the ESS score, explained 8% of the variance in general health perceptions, 17% of the variance in energy/fatigue, 6% of the variance in the summary measure of well-being, and 3% of the variance in the summary measure of functional status. The variation of MOS scores with sleepiness, unrelated to age or chronic disease, suggests that measures of general health status may be broadly influenced by sleepiness and sleep quality. These data suggest that 1) sleepiness has an important impact on general health and functional status, specifically influencing self-perceptions regarding energy/fatigue; 2) a more specific assessment of sleepiness in general health evaluations may help explain some of the observed variability in these measures across subjects; and 3) general health measures may be useful in the evaluations of patients with sleep disorders.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Children with sleep problems showed significantly more types of challenging behaviour and challenging behaviour of a greater severity than children without sleep problems, resulting in management difficulties for carers throughout the 24-h period.
Abstract: Sleep problems are common in children with severe learning difficulties. Children with sleep problems are reported to have more behaviour problems, but daytime challenging behaviour has not been examined specifically. The current study was concerned with associations between sleep problems and challenging behaviour, as well as describing other clinical features of the childrens' sleep, as reported by parents. All children in the series showed some form of sleep disturbance, with settling problems, night waking and early waking in 44% of the sample. Children with sleep problems showed significantly more types of challenging behaviour and challenging behaviour of a greater severity than children without sleep problems, resulting in management difficulties for carers throughout the 24-h period. Reasons for this association and suggestions for intervention are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: It was found that loud snoring, observed apneas, and daytime sleepiness are not associated cross-sectionally with hypertension or prevalent CVD in elderly persons.
Abstract: The objectives of this study were to describe the prevalence of snoring, observed apneas, and daytime sleepiness in older men and women, and to describe the relationships of these sleep disturbances to health status and cardiovascular diseases (CVD). A cross-sectional design was employed to study sleep problems, CVD, general health, psychosocial factors, and medication use. The subjects were participants in the Cardiovascular Health Study, which included 5,201 adults, aged 65 and older, who were recruited from a random sample of Medicare enrollees in four U.S. communities. Study measures employed were sleep questions, echocardiography, carotid ultrasound, resting electrocardiogram, cognitive function, cardiopulmonary symptoms and diseases, depression, independent activities of daily living (IADLs), and benzodiazepine use. Thirty-three percent of the men and 19% of the women reported loud snoring, which was less frequent in those over age 75. Snoring was positively associated with younger age, marital status, and alcohol use in men, and obesity, diabetes, and arthritis in women. Snoring was not associated, however, with cardiovascular risk factors or clinical CVD in men or women. Observed apneas were reported much less frequently (13% of men and 4% of women) than snoring, and they were associated with alcohol use, chronic bronchitis, and marital status in men. Observed apneas were associated with depression and diabetes in women. In both men and women, daytime sleepiness was associated with poor health, advanced age, and IADL limitations. The conclusions of the study were that loud snoring, observed apneas, and daytime sleepiness are not associated cross-sectionally with hypertension or prevalent CVD in elderly persons.

Journal ArticleDOI
Avi Sadeh1
01 Dec 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: It is suggested that subjective and objective measures should play a complementary role in the clinical assessment of night-waking problems in early childhood.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to investigate the use of objective and subjective sleep measures in diagnostic assessment of night-waking problems during infancy. Infant sleep-wake measures obtained from parental daily logs were compared with objective sleep measures derived from activity monitoring during a week-long period in 66 referred infants. Reported sleep measures were significantly correlated with objective sleep measures and showed a significant level of day-to-day stability. Parents were accurate reporters of sleep-schedule measures (e.g. sleep onset, r = 0.88; sleep duration, r = 0.74; p < 0.0001). However, parents were less accurate in assessing sleep quality measures, significantly overestimating the time that their infants spent in actual sleep and underestimating the number of their night-wakings (r = 0.41 and r = 0.60, respectively; P < 0.001). It is suggested that subjective and objective measures should play a complementary role in the clinical assessment of night-waking problems in early childhood.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1996-Sleep
TL;DR: It may be that factors that are secondary to or associated with sleep-disordered breathing, such as cardiovascular or pulmonary disease, predispose these elderly to death.
Abstract: A population-based probability sample of elderly individuals (n = 426), who were originally studied between 1981 and 1986 (mean age at initial study was 72.5 years), were followed for mortality. Those with > or = 30 respiratory disturbances per hour of sleep had significantly shorter survival (p = 0.0034), but the respiratory disturbance index (RDI) was not an independent predictor of death. When Cox proportional hazards analysis was done, only age (the strongest predictor), cardiovascular disease and pulmonary disease were independent predictors of death. It may be that factors that are secondary to or associated with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), such as cardiovascular or pulmonary disease, predispose these elderly to death.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The aim of this article is to review the incidence and duration of postoperative sleep disturbances, and to evaluate possible mechanisms and potential implications for postoperative outcome.
Abstract: Major surgery is beset by complications such as pulmonary, cardiac, thromboembolic and cerebral dysfunction, which cannot be attributed solely to inadequate surgical and anaesthetic techniques, but rather to increased organ demands caused by the endocrine metabolic response to surgical trauma [33]. Postoperative cerebral dysfunction comprises delirium, confusion and milder degrees of mental dysfunction [1, 48, 53, 62], and disturbances in the normal sleep pattern [4, 7, 9, 13, 17, 34, 39, 42, 65]. Changes in early postoperative sleep [4, 7, 8, 13, 17, 34, 39, 42, 65] and sleep after non-surgical stress [10, 20, 24, 26, 27, 29, 60] are characterized by a decrease in total sleep time, elimination of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, a marked reduction in the amount of slow wave sleep (SWS) and increased amounts of non-REM (N-REM) sleep stage 2. Recent data have suggested that postoperative sleep disturbances may be involved in the development of altered mental function [27], postoperative episodic hypoxaemia [38, 65] and haemodynamic instability [40]. The aim of this article, therefore, is to review the incidence and duration of postoperative sleep disturbances, and to evaluate possible mechanisms and potential implications for postoperative outcome.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To estimate the risk of mortality associated with excessive daytime sleepiness independent of nighttime sleep problems and other factors that limit survival, demographic and health‐related factors related to excessive daytimeSleepiness are described.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To describe the demographic and health-related factors related to excessive daytime sleepiness. To estimate the risk of mortality associated with excessive daytime sleepiness independent of nighttime sleep problems and other factors that limit survival. DESIGN: Four-year prospective cohort study with annual interviews. SETTING: One urban and four rural counties in north-central North Carolina. PARTICIPANTS: Adults 65 years and older (n = 3962) living in the community. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Excessive daytime sleepiness was measured as, “How often do you get so sleepy during the day or evening that you have to take a nap?” Mortality was based on continuous surveillance of the population by field investigators and abstraction of death certificates. RESULTS: Point prevalence of excessive daytime sleepiness in this population was 25.2%. Frequent daytime nappers were more likely than infrequent nappers to report nighttime sleep complaints and were more likely to be male and urban-dwellers, to report more depressive symptoms, more limited physical activity, and more functional impairment, and were more likely to be overweight. Of the frequent nappers, 23.9% died, compared with 15.4% of infrequent nappers. In an adjusted Cox proportional hazard model, the 4-year mortality rate was accelerated 1.73 times among older people who nap most of the time and make two or more errors on a cognitive status examination. CONCLUSION: Excessive napping is associated with impaired sleep hygiene as well as with a broad range of activity-related health deficits among community-dwelling older adults. Frequent napping was associated with impaired sleep hygiene, male gender, urban-dwelling, depressive symptoms, physical activity deficits, functional impairment, and excess weight. Mortality risk was elevated selectively among the most cognitively impaired subjects.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: TBI patients with persistent cognitive complaints have more sleep and pain concerns than general neurologic patients, especially mild TBI, population, and may contribute to increased disability.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A significant correlation was found between the number of asthma-related symptoms and sleep disturbances (p < 0.001), and Concurrent allergic rhinitis may be an important underlying cause of sleep impairment in asthmatic patients.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to investigate whether asthma is associated with decreased quality of sleep and increased daytime sleepiness. The study involved a random population of 2,202 subjects supplemented by 459 subjects with suspected asthma, aged 20-45 yrs. The subjects were from Reykjavik (Iceland), Uppsala and Goteborg (Sweden) and Antwerp (Belgium), and participated in the European Community Respiratory Health Survey. The investigation included a structured interview, methacholine challenge, skinprick tests and a questionnaire on sleep disturbances. Participants in Iceland and Sweden also estimated their sleep times and made peak expiratory flow (PEF) recordings during a period of 1 week. Asthma was defined as self-reported physician-diagnosed asthma with current asthma-related symptoms (n = 267). Difficulties inducing sleep (DIS) and early morning awakenings (EMA) were about twice as common, and daytime sleepiness 50% more common, in asthmatics compared with subjects without asthma. After adjusting for possible confounders, a positive association was found between asthma and: DIS (odds ratio (OR) = 1.8); EMA (OR = 2.0); daytime sleepiness (OR = 1.6); snoring (OR = 1.7); and self reported apnoeas (OR = 3.7). Allergic rhinitis, which was reported by 71% of subjects with asthma, was independently related to DIS (OR = 2.0) and daytime sleepiness (OR = 1.3). A significant correlation was found between the number of asthma-related symptoms and sleep disturbances (p < 0.001). Asthma is associated with decreased subjective quality of sleep and increased daytime sleepiness. Concurrent allergic rhinitis may be an important underlying cause of sleep impairment in asthmatic patients.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Treatment of sleep-disordered breathing by nasal continuous positive airway pressure is related to reduction in patient motor vehicle accident rates, probably due to the reversal of excessive daytime sleepiness.
Abstract: Sleepiness whilst driving constitutes a road safety risk. Sleep-related breathing disorders are the most frequent medical cause of daytime sleepiness, and untreated patients with this condition have been shown to be at a higher risk of having accidents while driving. This study addressed the question of the extent to which treatment of sleep-disordered breathing by nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) is related to changes in patient's accident risk. Seventy eight male patients requiring treatment of sleep-related breathing disorders with nCPAP were enrolled in the study. The protocol included a questionnaire dealing with alertness-related problems while driving, an 80 min vigilance test, and the Multiple Sleep Latency Test. These baseline evaluations were repeated after 1 year of treatment with nCPAP. Fifty nine patients completed the study. The accident rate was significantly decreased from 0.8 per 100,000 km (untreated) to 0.15 per 100,000 km with nCPAP treatment. Variables that were considered to be likely to increase accident risk (sleeping spells, fatigue, vigilance test reaction time, daytime sleep latency) also improved with treatment. We conclude that treatment of sleep-disordered breathing by nasal continuous positive airway pressure is related to reduction in patient motor vehicle accident rates, probably due to the reversal of excessive daytime sleepiness.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that hypersomnia following PTS is accompanied by deficient arousal during the day and insufficient spindling and slow‐wave sleep production at night, supporting the hypothesis of a dual role of the paramedian thalamus as “final common pathway” for both maintenance of wakefulness and promotion of NREM sleep.
Abstract: Paramedian thalamic stroke (PTS) is a cause of organic hypersomnia, which in the absence of systematic sleep-wake studies has been attributed to disruption of ascending activating impulses and considered a "dearoused" state. However, an increasing mount of data suggests a role of the thalamus in sleep regulation and raises the possibility that a sleep disturbance contributes to hypersomnia in PTS. We evaluated 12 patients with magnetic resonance imaging-proven isolated PTS and hypersomnia with 10 to >20 hours of sleep behavior per day. Nocturnal polysomnographic findings paralleled the severity of hypersomnia. All subjects had increased stage 1 NREM sleep, reduced stage 2 NREM sleep, and reduced numbers of sleep spindles. In patients with severe hypersomnia, slow-wave (stages 3-4) NREM sleep was often reduced, but there were no major REM sleep alterations. Daytime sleep behavior was associated mostly with stage 1 sleep by electroencephalogram; there was no correlation between hypersomnia and results of nap tests. We conclude that hypersomnia following PTS is accompanied by deficient arousal during the day and insufficient spindling and slow-wave sleep production at night. These observations support the hypothesis of a dual role of the paramedian thalamus as "final common pathway' for both maintenance of wakefulness and promotion of NREM sleep.