Insomnia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Blocking Nocturnal Blue Light to Treat Insomnia: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
NCT number | NCT02698800 |
Other study ID # | AAAQ6404 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | March 2016 |
Est. completion date | March 2017 |
Verified date | July 2019 |
Source | Columbia University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Under entrained conditions, humans maintain a consolidated nocturnal sleep episode that coincides with environmental darkness and endogenous melatonin secretion. Various factors, such as artificial light, can compromise this temporal harmony, resulting in sleep disruption. Light is the strongest synchronizer of the circadian clock, with direct inputs via the retinohypothalamic tract to brain centers regulating sleep and circadian rhythms. Evening light exposure can suppress melatonin secretion and worsen sleep. This is critical, since most individuals routinely expose themselves to light before bedtime. The high sensitivity of the circadian system to blue wavelength light indicates that modern light sources such as light-emitting diodes (LED) may have particularly deleterious effects on sleep. It is possible to selectively filter out blue light while maintaining other visible spectra with blue-blocking (BB) lenses. Wearing BB lenses before bedtime may present a simple, affordable, and safe method to improve sleep. None have yet investigated the effects of BB lenses on subjective and objective sleep in insomnia patients, while simultaneously exploring the effects on melatonin secretion.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 15 |
Est. completion date | March 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2017 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Insomnia for at least 1 month based on Insomnia Symptoms Questionnaire Exclusion Criteria: - obstructive sleep apnea; narcolepsy; periodic leg movement disorder - currently shift worker - psychiatric or neurologic disorders - deep vein thrombosis - current cigarette smoker - currently taking beta-blockers - pregnant/breastfeeding - children less than 1 year old at home - excessive daily caffeine intake |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Columbia University Medical Center | New York | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Columbia University |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Pittsburgh Insomnia Rating Scale-65 (PIRS65) Total Score | Pittsburgh Insomnia Rating Scale-65; measures the self-reported severity of insomnia over the past week. Higher scores indicate worsened severity. There are 65 items, each scored on a 4-point scale from low-high on symptom severity or frequency. There is a Total score, and 3 subscales: Distress score (how bothersome the sleep impairment is), Sleep Parameters score (sleep quality), and Quality of Life score. For the total score scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 1-65. Minimum Score=0 (good); Maximum Score=195 (bad) For the distress score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 1-46. Minimum Score=0 (not bothered); Maximum Score=138 (severely bothered) For the sleep parameters score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 47-56. Minimum Score=0 (good sleep); Maximum Score=30 (disrupted sleep) For the quality of life score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 57-65. Minimum Score=0 (excellent); Maximum Score=27 (poor) |
After 7 nights of BB lenses | |
Primary | Pittsburgh Insomnia Rating Scale-65 (PIRS65) Total Score | Pittsburgh Insomnia Rating Scale-65; measures the self-reported severity of insomnia over the past week. Higher scores indicate worsened severity. There are 65 items, each scored on a 4-point scale from low-high on symptom severity or frequency. There is a Total score, and 3 subscales: Distress score (how bothersome the sleep impairment is), Sleep Parameters score (sleep quality), and Quality of Life score. For the total score scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 1-65. Minimum Score=0 (good); Maximum Score=195 (bad) For the distress score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 1-46. Minimum Score=0 (not bothered); Maximum Score=138 (severely bothered) For the sleep parameters score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 47-56. Minimum Score=0 (good sleep); Maximum Score=30 (disrupted sleep) For the quality of life score, scoring is done by summing the scores from questions 57-65. Minimum Score=0 (excellent); Maximum Score=27 (poor) |
After 7 nights of clear lenses | |
Secondary | Sleep Efficiency (Time Spent Asleep Divided by Total Time in Bed) Determined With Wrist-worn Accelerometry | Wrist-worn accelerometry gives an estimate of time spent asleep, time spent in bed, and sleep efficiency can be calculated from this. Sleep efficiency is calculated as time spent asleep divided by total time in bed. Here, we considered the mean calculated sleep efficiency over each 7-day treatment period. | After 7 nights of BB lenses | |
Secondary | Sleep Efficiency (Time Spent Asleep Divided by Total Time in Bed) Determined With Wrist-worn Accelerometry | Wrist-worn accelerometry gives an estimate of time spent asleep, time spent in bed, and sleep efficiency can be calculated from this. Sleep efficiency is calculated as time spent asleep divided by total time in bed. Here, we considered the mean calculated sleep efficiency over each 7-day treatment period. | After 7 nights of clear lenses |
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