View clinical trials related to Sleep Deprivation.
Filter by:Many pregnant women suffer from poor sleep quality and snoring. Evidence shows an increasing association between (1) sleep disordered breathing and (2) maternal cardiovascular disease and in-hospital death. Snoring is a variant of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and OSA during pregnancy is associated with higher risks for cesarean delivery, gestational hypertension, preeclampsia and preterm delivery. It may also impact fetal outcomes negatively. The purpose of this study is to determine whether sleep quality can be improved in pregnant women who snore by means of an oral appliance that opens the airway. Sleep quality is evaluated objectively using an un-intrusive home sleep test system.
Metabolism is increasingly recognized as being highly regulated by anticipatory biological rhythms (circadian rhythms or "biorhythms"), which are driven by molecular feedback loops, and which are approximately 24 hours long ("circa diem"). These circadian rhythms exist both centrally, in the brain, but also in the periphery, and are specific to many tissues depending on their main biological function or functions. Whereas these circadian rhythms have been thoroughly characterized in other organisms, their role in humans remain poorly understood, partly because of the difficulty in studying these rhythms in peripheral tissues. The investigators therefore aim to characterize these rhythms in primarily skeletal muscle and adipose tissue in healthy young volunteers (using the so-called constant routine paradigm), and how these rhythms interact with one another at various genetic and molecular levels. At the same time, the investigators aim to study how an unhealthy vs. healthy diet can alter these circadian rhythms, and how they interact with circadian rhythms in other tissue compartments such as those expressed by blood cells.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the enhancement of electroencephalographic (EEG) slow-wave activity using transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) at Slow Oscillation (SO) frequency, during a restricted period of nocturnal sleep, enhances the restorative properties of that period of sleep and improves performance during a subsequent period of sleep deprivation.
Endogenous melatonin is produced by the pineal gland at night under normal conditions and regulates the sleep-wake cycle. Artificial light administered at night suppresses melatonin production and sleep disturbances are accompanied by abnormal melatonin secretion such as phase delay. Therefore, dramatic disturbances of endogenous rhythms in intensive care unit patients have remarkable effects on melatonin production. In addition to its physiological roles in regulating sleep patterns, melatonin has been demonstrated to provide antiinflammatory effects in experimental models. Although some previous studies have investigated the circadian pattern of melatonin in intensive care unit patients, the investigators think that the present study is the first one that will assess the effects of controlling noise and light on melatonin and inflammatory response after major abdominal surgery.
This study aimed to investigate the effect of 48-h sleep deprivation on heart rate variability (HRV) in young healthy people and the protective effect of statin on arrhythmia and HRV.
A double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study will be conducted in cardiac ICU patients who had been diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome, using a sleep promoting drug (zolpidem controlled release). The study hypothesis is that sleeping better can improve the heart recovery in patients with a diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether partial sleep deprivation, as compared with normal sleep, influences certain metabolic and cognitive parameters, related to food intake, hunger and memory functions, when participants are shielded from external time cues.
The purpose of this study is to examine the consequences of chronic sleep restriction on nighttime sleep, daytime alertness, performance and memory functions, and metabolic and cardiovascular function, and to determine if the consequences of chronic sleep restriction differ between healthy young and older adults.