View clinical trials related to Sleep Disorder.
Filter by:Functional dyspepsia refers to a chronic digestive system disease with upper abdominal symptoms originating from the gastroduodenal region, and after clinical examination, including upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, the organic diseases causing the above symptoms are excluded. According to Rome IV standard, functional dyspepsia can be divided into two categories: postprandial discomfort syndrome and epigastric pain syndrome. FD not only seriously affects the quality of life of patients, but also causes a heavy social and economic burden. Therefore, active prevention and treatment of FD, especially PDS, has become an unavoidable problem in clinic. Epidemiological investigation shows that about 30% FD patients have many negative emotions such as sleep disorder, anxiety and depression, and many anti-negative emotional drugs themselves can cause gastrointestinal side effects, which are considered to be the key reasons for the recurrence of symptoms. In recent years, people have paid more and more attention to the brain-gut axis. Microbial-intestinal-brain axis can also affect brain function by releasing neurotransmitters and inflammatory mediators. In addition, the interaction between bile acids and intestinal microflora may also affect the normal function of the intestine. However, the relationship between specific bile acids, microflora and functional dyspepsia is still uncertain. At present, the effective and safe treatment methods for FD with sleep disorder are still very limited. In recent years, auricular point pressing bean therapy has obvious advantages in treating FD with sleep disorder. This study plans to study the clinical efficacy and mechanism of auricular point stimulation on functional dyspepsia with sleep disorder. Provide more treatment methods and ideas for clinicians, popularize and apply green diagnosis and treatment methods, bring good news to more patients, and produce remarkable economic and social benefits.
To this study is recruiting non- emergency patients to whom are planning to make coronary artery bypass intervention. From all patients are going to examine transthoracic echo, collect blood samples and register overnight sleep polygraph in a qualified sleep laboratory two times; first before cabg and second one after surgery.
People living with HIV (PLHIV) appear to present with sleep-related complaints more frequently than the general population, with a prevalence of 50-70%. The latest French multi-center epidemiological data are dated. The prevalence of the different types of sleep disorders, however, is poorly documented, with the literature focusing mainly on insomnia and neuropsychological disorders that can lead to sleep disorder-like symptoms, and on the impact of antiretroviral drugs in particular. However, there are other sleep disorders such as sleep apnea syndrome (SAHOS) or restless legs syndrome. SAHOS has been studied in small series of patients. This multicenter, cross-sectional study will identify and update the functional complaints presented by PLHIV, estimate the prevalence of people at high risk of sleep apnea syndrome, and study the associated socio-demographic factors, in relation to HIV infection and antiretrovirals. This study could open up avenues for new management approaches and earlier detection of sleep disorders.
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are an inflammatory disease that can affect the entire digestive tract from the mouth to the anus for CD and the entire colon and rectum for UC. They mainly affect adolescents and young adults. These pathologies evolve in relapses interspersed with phases of remission. Sometimes associated with extraintestinal manifestations (joint, dermatological, ophthalmological or biliary systems), chronic inflammation of the digestive tract and the resulting symptoms (abdominal pain, diarrhea, rectal syndrome, etc.) lead to a significant alteration in the quality of life of patients in all spheres of activity (professional, sexual, social). Sleep is a basic neurophysiological state, the normal total duration of which in humans is between six and ten hours per day. It is an essential element of the circadian rhythm in humans, influencing certain cellular functions and in particular the synthesis of cytokines and pro-inflammatory molecules (Nobel Prize in Medicine awarded to Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young in 2017). Sleep disturbances and disruption of the circadian rhythm lead to metabolic and immunological dysfunctions, which may be involved in chronic inflammatory conditions through changes in the immune response. In the field of IBD, many studies suggest poor sleep quality in patients with IBD. While there seems to be a link between sleep disorders and impaired quality of life with a socio-professional impact in these patients, the links between IBD activity, its treatment and sleep disorders are poorly studied, with discordant results in previous studies. In order to enrich our knowledge on this topic, the investigators wish to study the prevalence and risk factors associated with sleep disorders in IBD patients in order to improve patients' quality of life
This proof-of-concept study will evaluate the impact of surgically placing and stimulating the hypoglossal nerve and/or a second neural target Ansa Cervicalis, with a set of off-the-shelf electrode arrays.
The goal of this study is to conduct a prospective, longitudinal assessment of the natural clinical progression of children and adults with Synaptotagmin1-Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorder also known as Baker Gordon Syndrome (BAGOS). This will be performed by acquiring baseline measurements and developing effective outcome measures and diagnostic tools for the disorder, to prepare the healthcare system for future clinical trials.
There is still a lack of research to explore the interaction between high-pressure workers and probiotics to improve the intestinal microbiota, sleep, inflammation and anti-oxidation. A total of 120 subjects are expected to be recruited and divided into two groups of 60 subjects, receiving probiotics or placebo, and completing a 8-week trial period.
The main objective will be to assess the effect of Lactium® on sleep efficiency in volunteers presented with persistent subclinical insomnia.
This study is aimed to validate the questionnaire called Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire on a Swedish cohort of children from 18 months to 15 years old with obstructive sleep disordered breathing.
In this study, a two-part recursive convolutional neural networks model was developed, extracting features for each epoch window independently from before and after sleep onset (epoch encoder), and then trained in the context of long-term relationships in the sleep process (sequence encoder), using an approach similar to human expert classification based on information from single-channel forehead EEG and PPG (IR, Green, Red). The classification is based on guidelines from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and calculated six parameters: total sleep duration (TST), wake (W), N1, N2, N3, and REM. The validation study of the developed model and the device was conducted at the Sleep Disorders Centre of the Istanbul Medical Faculty using concurrent polysomnographic data from 305 male and female patients aged 18 to 65 years.