Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to understand patients' neurocognitive performance shortly after discharge from the Medical Intensive Care Unit (MICU) and the potential effect of sleep quality in the MICU on those neurocognitive outcomes. The investigators hypothesize that post-ICU neurocognitive function and patient overall ICU sleep experience will improve through a pre-existing MICU sleep improvement initiative.


Clinical Trial Description

Despite decades of scientific interest in evaluating sleep among critically ill patients, little is known about the effects of intensive care unit (ICU)-associated sleep disturbances on patient outcomes. Furthermore, few interventions have been rigorously evaluated to demonstrate efficacy in improving sleep in the ICU and associated patient outcomes. Post-ICU neurocognitive test performance data from this study will be linked to a pre-existing Quality Improvement (QI) project for patient sleep in the MICU. We hypothesize that patients' post-ICU neurocognitive performance (delirium status, attention, short-term memory, processing speed, and executive function) will positively correlate with scores from a previously-published Sleep in the Intensive Care Unit Questionnaire. In addition, we hypothesize that both neurocognitive performance and the Sleep in the Intensive Care Unit Questionnaire will improve during the multi-stage MICU-wide sleep QI project. Our project will provide valuable empirical evidence to help support guidelines for promoting sleep in the ICU setting. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01061242
Study type Interventional
Source Johns Hopkins University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 2010
Completion date July 2010

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05956886 - Sleep Chatbot Intervention for Emerging Black/African American Adults N/A
Completed NCT02996864 - Location-based Smartphone Technology to Guide College Students Healthy Choices Ph II N/A
Completed NCT03129204 - Sensation Awareness Focused Training for Spouses N/A
Withdrawn NCT04049682 - Start Times and Restful Sleep
Completed NCT03182413 - Impact of THN102 on Attention, Wakefulness and Cognitive Performance During Total Sleep Deprivation Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT01930279 - Effect of Partial Sleep Deprivation on Immunological System in Peripheral Blood N/A
Completed NCT01989741 - Effect of Sleep Restriction on Decision Making and Inflammation N/A
Completed NCT00228215 - Tips for Infant and Parent Sleep (TIPS) N/A
Completed NCT00123214 - A Change in Diet May Decrease the Negative Consequences of Chronic Sleep Deprivation N/A
Completed NCT00079664 - Comparing Tai Chi Training to a Low-Stress Physical Activity to Enhance Sleep in Older Adults Phase 1
Completed NCT04179838 - Olfactory Contributions to Sleep-dependent Food Craving N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05513339 - Effect of Sleep Deprivation on Cognitive Function Among Cardiology Fellows
Recruiting NCT05026541 - Resilience to Sleep Deprivation and Changes in Sleep Architecture in Shoonya Meditators N/A
Withdrawn NCT04096261 - The Importance of Sleep Quality and the Blood-brain Barrier in Cognitive Disorders and Alzheimer's Disease
Recruiting NCT06017882 - Combined Effects of Acute Sleep Restriction and Moderate Acceleration (+Gz) on Physiological and Behavioral Responses to High Mental Workload
Completed NCT00179322 - Effects of Sleep Deprivation and Recovery on Cognitive Functions
Recruiting NCT06399939 - The Function of Biphasic Sleep in Infants N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06027047 - Breakthrough Anxiety and Sleep Evaluation Using Linked Devices and Smartphone Application Onar (BASEL)
Completed NCT05162105 - Quick Returns - Sleep, Cognitive Functions and Individual Differences N/A
Completed NCT03981770 - Characterisation of Gut Microbiota, Bispectral Index Data and Plasma Kynurenine in Patients Undergoing Thyroid Surgery