View clinical trials related to Sleep.
Filter by:More than half of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) workers report work-related mental and physical fatigue. Odds of injury among fatigued EMS workers are nearly double that of non-fatigued workers. There is a compelling need to reduce fatigue among EMS workers, yet few EMS organizations have a formal fatigue management program and many may not be cost-effective or evidence-based. This trial addresses national goals of the National Occupational Research Agenda (NORA) and tests a novel approach to fatigue risk management that is easily scalable to large workforces and low-cost for employers of shift workers.
If teenagers attain the recommended amount of sleep (9-9.5 hours per night), they will feel less stress and have better athletic and academic performance. The investigators will track students sleep patterns before and after a sleep intervention where they are given a packet of sleep tips and encouraged to improve their sleep hygiene. Outcomes include stress levels, academic/athletic performance, and sleep cycle data from the sleep tracking watch.
Prescription opioid misuse and its associated negative effects have become an epidemic in the United States, and post-operative opioid use contributes to this terrible problem. Alternative strategies to opioid prescribing are thus highly sought after in the post-operative setting. Importantly, sleep and pain have a bi-directional relationship, and inadequate or impaired sleep regularly occur following orthopedic operations. Melatonin is an endogenous sleep hormone that can be administered exogenously, and that has been shown to have some potential as an analgesic agent. Here, using the premise that melatonin may improve sleep and pain in the post-operative setting, the investigators propose a randomized clinical trial in 120 participants undergoing total knee arthroplasties. Patients will be randomized to receive either sublingual melatonin 5 mg or matched placebo starting on post-operative day (POD) 0 and through POD . The investigators will measure post-operative opioid usage as the primary outcome, and post-operative pain scores as a secondary outcome. The primary safety outcome will be sedation level, as measured by the Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS). Sleep will be measured objectively using wrist-worn actigraphy. Participants will be followed through POD 28, and will also have baseline data on sleep, pain, and cognition obtained prior to surgery.
Prospective within-subject study of dexmedetomidine sedation paired with CLAS conditions in repeated blocks. Intervention will consist of CLAS in-phase with EEG slow waves. Anti-phase stimulation will serve as an active control while sham stimulation will serve as a passive control.
This study will include any participant who registered, and plans to attend the Inner Engineering In-Person Completion Course. In 2019, this course was offered in: Los Angeles in March, Philadelphia in April and Toronto & Dallas in November. This study has been involved in every IECO Course since 2019 and is still active today. Beginning in August 2021, investigators will recruit for the August Inner Engineering In-Person Completion Course. Investigators anticipate that this study can include up to 5,000 study participants. Participants would attend this course and complete the pre-modules regardless of whether or not they participate in this study.
The People's trial is an online pragmatic, randomised controlled trial to determine if reading a book in bed makes a difference to sleep in comparison to not reading a book in bed.
Sleep and particularly deep sleep are playing an important role for brain and body health. Poor sleep has been associated with risk factors for cardiovascular disease and moreover, is hypothesized to increased mortality risk of cardiovascular diseases. Yet, the role of specific sleep processes for cardiovascular function remains unclear. Particularly deep sleep, which is manifested by large amplitude, low frequency oscillations is of importance for the restorative functions of sleep. Thus, the modulation of deep sleep by auditory stimulation will be of central interests to assess the cause-effect relationship of specific processes within sleep for cardiovascular regulation. This study will assess the effects of slow wave modulating auditory stimulation on cardiovasuclar functions in healthy male participants.
This study will test the effect of race-based social rejection on polysomnography derived sleep outcomes and nocturnal cardiovascular psychophysiology in a sample of 80 African Americans and 80 Caucasian Americans. The investigators will test group differences on these outcomes as well as within subjects by testing impact of rejection compared to a non-rejection control night in the sleep laboratory.
This study seeks to observe the effects of a proprietary spearmint extract and green tea blend on sleep quality and duration. The study observes the effect of the supplement regarding sleep quality, and mental health.
The investigators will test the effects of 10-60mg dronabinol (oral THC) on sleep in non-frequent and frequent cannabis users.