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Sleep Deprivation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01603550 Completed - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

Brain Energy and Cognition

Start date: June 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This proposed laboratory study will extend previous findings on relationships between cognitive function and nutritional status to conditions that more closely resemble military operations where aerobic exercise, inadequate nutritional intake and sleep deprivation combine to degrade cognitive function. The investigators will examine cognitive function, brain activity and glucose levels in volunteers who are calorie-deprived, performing high workload cognitive tests, exercising and, in one arm of the study, are sleep-deprived for approximately 48 hours. A comprehensive cognitive test battery will be repeatedly administered and several cognitive tests will be administered when volunteers are exercising. Interstitial glucose levels will be assessed and whole body nitrogen utilization determined. The effects of energy restriction and the physiological basis of the relationship between peripheral glucose levels and cognitive function will be examined using a state-of-the-art imaging technology, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). This technique will allow any key brain regions affected by caloric deprivation to be identified.

NCT ID: NCT01596543 Completed - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

The Effect of Partial and Complete Sleep Deprivation on Heat Tolerance

Start date: November 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the effect of partial and complete sleep deprivation on exercise heat tolerance. Twelve healthy young male volunteers will participate in the study. They will arrive to our lab four times, in each visit the will undergo VO2 test and Heat Tolerance Test (HTT) after sleeping different amount of hours.

NCT ID: NCT01581125 Completed - Sleep Clinical Trials

Sleep Duration Required to Restore Performance During Chronic Sleep Restriction

Start date: April 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that sleep and performance depend on length of time awake, length of time asleep, the amount of sleep over several sleep episodes, and circadian phase.

NCT ID: NCT01545843 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Repeated Partial Sleep Deprivation to Augment SSRI Response in Depression

Start date: March 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to determine whether changing sleep patterns improves response to an antidepressant medication.

NCT ID: NCT01461174 Completed - Healthy Clinical Trials

Effects of Donepezil and Memantine on Cognitive Functions After a Sleep Deprivation Challenge in Healthy Volunteers

Start date: November 2011
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to assess the utility of sleep deprivation as a potential model for prediction of clinical efficacy using a combination of cognitive physiological endpoints.

NCT ID: NCT01443156 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

The Effects of Work Schedule and Sleep Patterns on Caregivers' Health

Start date: January 2012
Phase:
Study type: Observational

BACKGROUND. Sleep deficiency (not getting enough sleep) is widespread in American adults and can lead to many harmful health outcomes such as a higher risk of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. Sleep deficiency can also harm cognitive performance, which refers to one's awareness and thinking ability. Sleep deficiency and sleep-related health issues are of high interest among those who have irregular and/or extended work schedules, because such schedules can interfere with normal biological rhythms of sleepiness and wakefulness. PURPOSE. This study will examine the health and cognitive effects of work schedule and sleep patterns in caregivers (such as nurses, laboratory technicians, and non-clinical hospital staff). The investigators hypothesize that the nontraditional, irregular, and extended work hours common in these professions will have adverse health and cognitive effects. The purposes of this protocol are to: - Enroll caregivers into a one year cohort study on the relationships among work schedule, sleep, diet, chronic disease, and cognitive performance. (A cohort study follows a group of participants over time to see how different behaviors or risk factors affect health.) - Collect data from caregivers on work schedule, sleep, diet, chronic disease, and cognitive performance. - Give personalized information and feedback to caregivers about these health factors. - Educate caregivers about healthy diet and exercise choices. - Collect saliva from caregivers for future research on the role of genes in health. (Specimen collection for genetic testing will be offered as a separate option for study participants.) RECRUITMENT. This study will use the Let's Get Healthy! health research and education program (OHSU IRB #3694) as a platform for recruitment and data collection. Caregivers will be invited to participate in a Let's Get Healthy! event and will be given information prior to the event about the cohort study. At the Let's Get Healthy! event, caregivers will first consent to the anonymous research study (OHSU IRB #3694), in which demographic and health screening data are linked to a random number. Caregivers will then have the option to consent to a cohort study, in which data are no longer anonymous but instead linked to participants' names and contact information. PROCEDURES. This cohort study piggybacks on procedures already approved for the Let's Get Healthy! program (OHSU IRB #3694). Let's Get Healthy! is a study in which participants provide anonymous data at health fairs through any or all of the following manners: short computer surveys on cancer awareness, risk factors, and family history (with immediate feedback given on cancer risk and prevention); short computer surveys on diet and sleep patterns (with immediate printed feedback given); health screening measurements (blood pressure, height, weight, waist circumference, body mass index, body fat percentage); a finger stick to assess sugar and fat levels in blood; and a mouthwash swish to provide a saliva specimen. However, this cohort study (OHSU IRB #7542) will make the following changes and additions: - Personal health data, instead of being anonymous, will be linked to participants' names and contact information (for follow-up data collection). - Let's Get Healthy! events will include cognitive performance tests, a preventative-care survey, and a work schedule survey. - Participants will provide data not only at an initial Let's Get Healthy! event, but also at a follow-up event and during the time period between events. Between events, participants will do the surveys on work schedule, diet, and sleep, and they will complete cognitive performance tests. - There will be a separate consent process for participants to provide a fully identifiable saliva specimen. DATA ANALYSIS. Participants' health data will be fully identifiable at the time of data collection but will be coded and stored in a physically separate location from the identifiable information. The link between identifiable information and coded health information will be stored on a password protected computer, and all identifiable information will be deleted upon completion of data analyses. Data will be analyzed to explore relationships among work schedule, sleep, diet, body composition, metabolic health, chronic disease, and cognitive performance in caregivers. Genetic relationships with these factors will be analyzed in those who provided a saliva specimen during entry visit data collection.

NCT ID: NCT01433315 Completed - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

Physiologic Effects of Sleep Restriction

Start date: October 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Evidence suggests a relationship between sleep deprivation and cardiovascular disease. The investigators wish to determine whether 9 nights of modest sleep restriction results in activation of cardiovascular disease mechanisms, thus potentially increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease. The investigators hypothesize that sleep restriction will result in elevated blood pressure, inflammation, and neurocognitive deficits.

NCT ID: NCT01334788 Completed - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

Sleep Deprivation and Energy Balance

Start date: December 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Chronic sleep deprivation may constitute an important and potentially correctable behavioral factor in the alarming increase in obesity. There are no definitive experimental studies in humans showing whether sleep deprivation indeed contributes to increased energy intake and/or reduced energy expenditure. The investigators propose a series of novel studies to investigate abnormalities in energy homeostasis imparted by sleep deprivation. The investigators will measure food intake, energy expenditure (basal metabolic rate, thermal effect of food, and non-exercise activity thermogenesis), and neurohormone levels in 24 healthy subjects with normal BMI (20-25 kg/m2). Twelve subjects (6 men and 6 women) will be randomized to sleep deprivation. Measurements will be compared to those obtained in 12 subjects who are randomized to a control group, and are not sleep deprived. The investigators will test the following hypotheses: 1. That sleep deprivation results in positive energy balance (increased caloric intake and decreased energy expenditure, as reflected by decreased non-exercise activity thermogenesis). 2. That dysregulation of appetite and energy expenditure is associated with changes in molecules controlling appetite and metabolism. 3. That changes associated with 8 days of modest sleep deprivation resolve, at least in part, over a 4 day recovery period.

NCT ID: NCT01284842 Completed - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

Call- Associated Acute Fatigue in Surgical Residency

CAFIS
Start date: October 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The study aimed to evaluate the effects of 24-Hour-Call-associated acute partial sleep deprivation on surgical residents` technical and cognitive performance in a virtual reality (VR) setting. Physiological parameters were used to quantify fatigue in respect to hours of sleep and subjective degrees of sleepiness. Technical performance and cognitive skills were assessed through low- and high fidelity tasks usig the VR- simulator LapSim. Objective alertness was measured by the standardized d2-Paper-Pencil-Test. Cited assessments were performed on three consecutive mornings- pre- and post-call as after 24 hours resting.

NCT ID: NCT01284140 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Improving the Sleep and Circadian Rhythms of Mechanically Ventilated Patients

Start date: January 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this project is to determine whether the sleep and circadian rhythms of critically ill patients undergoing mechanical ventilation can be improved through practical strategies that can be employed at the bedside.