View clinical trials related to Sleep Disorder.
Filter by:Hundreds of thousands of adolescents experience protracted recoveries from concussion, which can affect all aspects of their lives and create family and societal burden. Research suggests that interventions to improve their sleep quantity and/or quality could improve recovery from concussion, but current treatment models are costly and onerous for families, fit poorly with integrated care models, and leave youth and their families to suffer months of protracted burden. This study will evaluate the efficacy of a promising brief behavioral sleep intervention, which could prove to be a powerful new tool to head off protracted symptom burden.
Safety and performance study of the MemoWave electroencephalographic and sound recording device to increase slow brain waves during sleep to improve memory consolidation in subjects with mild cognitive impairment
Background: People who have had a traumatic brain injury (TBI) often experience fatigue. Fatigue is the feeling tired all the time. Researchers want to learn more about how TBI and fatigue are related. Objective: To better understand fatigue after TBI in active duty military and veterans. Eligibility: Active duty service members or veterans ages 25-40 who have sustained at least 1 TBI more than 6 months but less than 5 years ago Design: Participants will be screened with: - Medical history - Physical exam - Blood and urine tests Participants will have Visit 1 the same day as screening. This will include questionnaires and interviews. These will be about their fatigue, quality of life, and health. Participants will wear an activity monitor on their wrist and complete a sleep diary for 7 days at home. Participants will have Visit 2: They will stay in the clinic for 2 nights. The visit will include: - Tests of memory, attention, and thinking - Placement of intravenous (IV) line: A needle will guide a thin plastic tube into the participant s arm vein. - 2 overnight sleeps tests: Participants brain waves will be recorded while they sleep. Small electrodes will be placed on the scalp. Monitors will be placed on the skin. These will measure breathing, heart rate, and movement. Blood will be drawn overnight through the IV line. - Optional hydrocortisone stimulation test: Participants will receive the hormone through the IV line. Blood will be drawn through the IV line 5 times over 1 hour. - Optional MRI: Participants will lie in a machine. This machine is a metal cylinder that takes pictures of the brain.
Background: People who have had a traumatic brain injury (TBI) often have trouble sleeping. TBI may also alter hormones, which can cause poor sleep. Researchers believe that a form of growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) might improve sleep in service members and veterans who have had a TBI. Objective: To see if GHRH can improve sleep in people who have had a TBI. Eligibility: Active duty service members or veterans (active duty in the past 10 years) ages 18-45 who have had a TBI in the past 6 months to 10 years. Design: Participants will be screened with: Medical history Physical exam Blood and urine tests Getting ACTH (a hormone) through an intravenous catheter (thin plastic tube) Interview about their mood and alcohol and drug use Questionnaires about their TBI, mood, and sleep Participants will have 2 overnight study visits a couple weeks apart. These will include: Physical exam Urine sample Two intravenous catheters placed. Blood samples will be taken throughout the night. Two shots under the skin of the belly. The shots will be GHRH on one visit and placebo on the other. Spending the night in the sleep lab. Their brain waves will be recorded with electrodes placed on the scalp. A questionnaire in the morning about their sleep Participants will be called a few days after each overnight visit. They will be asked about how they are feeling and to rate their sleep.