Mechanically Ventilated ICU Patients Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Sodium Oxybate on Sleep Architecture in Critically Ill Patients: A Double-Blind, Crossover Pilot Study
The purpose of this study is to determine what effect sodium oxybate has on the functions of sleep in mechanically ventilated, critically ill patients hospitalized in an intensive care unit.
Sleep is disrupted in the critically ill and may lead to impaired neurocognitive function,
decreased immune function, increased protein catabolism, and may compromise the ability to
wean patients from mechanical ventilation. Critically ill patients may appear to sleep
throughout most of their stay, but their quality of sleep is different from that of a normal
healthy subject.Critically ill patients spend more time in the wakefulness stages of sleep
(Stage 1 and 2) at the expense of the restorative stages (Stage 3 and 4) and REM sleep. These
patients also experience an increased number of arousals and awakenings. Various factors are
thought to be the cause of abnormal sleep architecture: ICU environment, pain, illness
severity, psychosocial stress, medications, and mechanical ventilation.
Sodium oxybate (Xyrem®) is the sodium salt of the central nervous system depressant
γ-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) and is currently approved for use in narcoleptic patients to
improve cataplexy and excessive daytime sleepiness.
Studies evaluating the use of sodium oxybate in narcoleptic patients suggest that sodium
oxybate is effective at increasing slow-wave sleep, sleep efficiency, sleep latency, and
REM-sleep efficiency, while also decreasing REM-sleep latency, stage 1 NREM sleep and sleep
fragmentation.3, 16-19 Currently there is a lack of data evaluating the effects of sodium
oxybate on sleep in critically ill patients. Obtaining evidence that sodium oxybate improves
sleep architecture in the critically ill, may provide the foundation to complete future
studies evaluating the effect of sodium oxybate on clinical outcomes such as duration of
mechanical ventilation and length of ICU stay. Based on sodium oxybate's ability to improve
sleep architecture in narcoleptic patients along with the fact that critically ill patients
have similar disrupted sleep architecture, it's postulated that sodium oxybate may improve
the sleep architecture in critically ill patients.
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