View clinical trials related to Sleep Disorders.
Filter by:This is a case control study of the association between burning mouth syndrome and sleep dysfunction. Cases will comprise of patients diagnosed with burning mouth syndrome at the UCSF oral medicine clinic. Controls will include patients with leukoplakia, pigmented lesions, traumatic lesions, benign tumors, mucoceles, and pemphigoid matched on age (5 years) and gender to the cases. New patients as well as those presenting for follow-up visits will be eligible. Each case and control subject will be administered the following 4 questionnaires by interview: (1) enrollment questionnaire (2) Sleep scale from the medical outcomes study (MOS), (3) current sleep status scale and (4) a numerical rating scale for measurement of oral symptoms. Cases (BMS patients) will be followed in the clinic or by telephone contact once per month for the following 6 months and questionnaires 1 (question 6 only), 2, 3 and 4 will be administered by interview.
This research will examine why sleep restriction reduces the body clock's response to bright light. The results will enable the optimization of the bright light treatment of people who suffer from circadian rhythm sleep disorders, which include shift work sleep disorder, jet lag, delayed sleep phase syndrome and winter depression, thereby improving public health and safety, well-being, mood, mental function, and quality of life.
The purpose of this study is to study circadian rhythms, or daily cycles of sleep, wake, and activity. The investigators hope to learn how disturbed sleep in Alzheimer's Disease relates to changes in activity cycles, and how sleep disturbances may affect your daytime alertness. This project selects patients suffering from memory problems, or voluntary to be in our Control Group. There are three parts to this study: Sleep Diaries, Behavioral Questionnaire, and Activity Recordings
The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of pantoprazole on sleep disorders in patients with NERD (non-erosive reflux disease) or eGERD (erosive gastroesophageal reflux disease). The prevalence and intensity of the sleep disorders were evaluated by a standardized questionnaire. The study was expected to provide further data on safety and tolerability of pantoprazole.
To test if usual at home night time sleep duration as measured with activity monitors and questionnaires will predict changes in kidney function as measured by kidney filtration rate and of cardiovascular function as measured by C-reactive protein in the blood. The study will explore the role of decreased sleep time or decreased sleep quality as a non-traditional risk factor for the progression of CKD and for the development of cardiovascular disease in CKD.
This study will help determine the relationship between impaired sleep and chronic kidney disease, specifically to determine if sleep disturbances are a risk factor for worsening kidney function.
This study is designed to determine if either short night time sleep or poor night time sleep could be a risk factor for increasing the rate at which kidney function deteriorates in persons with mild to moderate kidney disease.
The purpose of this research study is to compare the effectiveness of Zolpidem CR to that of placebo in improving sleep efficiency in people with dementia admitted to the hospital because of their symptoms. You can participate in this study if you have dementia of the Alzheimer's type or vascular dementia. This study involves placebo; a placebo is a tablet that looks exactly like Zolpidem CR, the study drug, but contains no active study drug. We will use placebos to see if the study results are due to the study drug or due to other reasons. Zolpidem CR is also called Ambien CR and is widely available by prescription. Zolpidem CR is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the short-term treatment of insomnia (trouble falling or staying asleep).
Medical literature has shown that 1 out of 2 patients that are admitted to the hospital as a cardiac patient, will be found suffering from sleep breathing disorders. The medical literature also shows that there is an advantage of treating the sleep breathing disorders in addition to treating the cardiac disease or evaluating the heart failure condition to provide better clinical outcomes.this study is evaluating the ability to detect sleep and cardiac related breathing disordered.
Efavirenz causes neuropsychiatric side effects and sleep disturbance, including vivid dreams, dizziness, and abnormal tiredness. These symptoms are frequent during the first weeks of treatment, with subsequent attenuation but may not completely resolve even years after efavirenz initiation. The investigators plan a twelve week, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study. In group 1, efavirenz will be replaced with efavirenz placebo plus etravirine, in group 2, efavirenz would be continued, and etravirine placebo given in addition. After six weeks, patients in group 1 would switch to the regimen of group 2, and vice versa. The primary endpoint of the trial will be patient preference. Sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and anxiety will also be investigated.