View clinical trials related to Sleep Wake Disorders.
Filter by:Prospective, randomized crossover study to compare the NFT sleep patches to sham device to assess sleep via home sleep testing device in the home environment
This study aimed to observe how a six week qigong program influence patients with head and neck cancer during active radiotherapy treatment course. The quality of life, sleep dysfunction or depression and shoulder and neck function will be accessed by questionnaire, and ANS function will be objectively investigated using heart rate variability measurement.
The current project is a safety and health intervention focused on sleep and fatigue among truck driver teams (pairs), where one driver sleeps in a moving vehicle while the other partner drives. This study is conducted within the Oregon Healthy Workforce Center (OHWC), a NIOSH Center of Excellence in Total Worker Health. We will evaluate engineering and behavioral interventions to improve sleep, reduce fatigue, and impact Total Worker Health. An enhanced cab intervention will alter whole body vibrations during driving and sleep periods, and includes a therapeutic mattress system and an active suspension seat. The enhanced cab will be evaluated alone and in combination with a behavioral sleep intervention adapted from our effective SHIFT (Safety &Health Involvement For Truckers) program. The interventions prioritize hazard reduction according to the hierarchy of controls, and will be evaluated with a randomized controlled design.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effects of morning bright light therapy on fatigue, sleep disturbances, and circadian activity rhythms in lung cancer survivors.
Sleep disorders are common in patients who have chronic kidney disease (CKD). Insomnia is reported in up to 50% of patients treated with hemodialysis compared to 12% of a control population. Restless leg syndrome (RLS) and periodic limb movement disorder (PLM) have been described in 30 to 70% of patients with end stage kidney disease (ESKD). Patients with CKD have also been reported to have a very high prevalence of sleep apnoea disorder. Conventional hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis do not appear to improve sleep disorders in patients with CKD. There is emerging evidence that nocturnal HD can lead to improvements in sleep quality. Transplantation is thought to improve sleep-related disorders in some but not all patients. Project Aims The aims of this project were three-fold: 1. To perform detailed assessment of sleep quality in a cohort of Irish patients with ESRD 2. To assess the feasability and tolerability of unattended home PSG and wrist actigraphy as diagnostic tools in this cohort 3. To assess the impact of a change in RRT modality on sleep quality in Irish patients with ESRD
The purpose of this study is to investigate the genetic variants of clock and narcolepsy genes that determine the therapeutic effects of Stalevo® on the quality of sleep in patients with Parkinson's Disease.
Brief Summary Context. Sleep disorders complaints are common in elderly and hypnosedative drugs are widely prescribed in community-dwelling elderly. Furthermore, acute hospitalisation may induce sleep disorders and hypnosedative initiation occurs in 14 to 29% of elderly during a hospital stay. These hospital-induced sleep disorders should spontaneously disappear after discharge and, because of their potential impact on falls, hip fractures, psychiatric side effects and induced dependence, hypnosedative drugs should therefore be discontinued at discharge in these naïve-treated patients. Adhesion to this recommendation is poor. Recent and on-going research on this topic mostly concerns adverse effects although these are already substantially documented and evidence-based, while there is a poor interest on developing research on potential strategies susceptible to practically improve the current adhesion to recommendations. Design and objectives. This project proposes multi-component intervention and is directed towards hospital prescribers, patients, and their general practitioner. It aims at discontinuing, at hospital discharge, the hypnosedative treatment that was initiated during hospitalization in naïve-treated elderly (ageā„65) patients. The value of the intervention, as compared to usual care management, will be estimated in a multicentre (6 hospitals gathering 8 centres: 5 internal medicine departments, 3 cardiology departments) randomised, cross-over, two-period trial. Two hospitals will gather 2 centres (2x2 centres) and 4 hospitals will gather only 1 centre (4x1 centres). An equilibrated randomization will be applied to the 8 centres, making sure that, in hospitals gathering 2 centres, these 2 centres will apply the same strategy in a given period and that the 2 hospitals will apply alternative strategies. This randomisation is set up to avoid the risk of a potential contamination between the 2 strategies from one centre to the other within the same hospital. As a result, 3 hospitals (including 4 medical departments) will apply the intervention during the first 11-month period, while the 3 others (including 4 medical departments) will apply usual care during this period, as a result of an equilibrated hospitals randomization. During the second 11-month period, each hospital will apply the alternative management. The two periods will be separated by a 1-month wash-out period. In all 240 patients (15 patients / centre) will be enrolled (120 in the intervention group and 120 in the usual care group). Patient follow-up duration will be 12 months after discharge. Patient status in regards with quality of sleep (study primary objective), hypnosedative consumption and frequency of falls (secondary objectives) will be collected by telephone interviews 1, 3, 6 12 months after discharge. Expected results. The results of the study should contribute to guide research and public decisions to practically decrease hypnosedative prescription and consumption, and associated adverse events.
- Major surgery can lead to postoperative disturbances in sleep patterns with subjective deterioration of sleep quality according to patients' reports as well as objective alterations of sleep architecture, as recorded by polysomnography - Factors implicated in postoperative sleep disturbances include but are not limited to the severity of the surgical procedure, the neuroendocrine response to surgery, inadequate treatment of postoperative pain and external factors interfering with sleep, such as light, noise and therapeutic procedures - There are differences in the molecular mechanisms inhalational anesthetics and intravenous agents affect different brain regions to induce anesthesia. Our hypothesis is that these differences may also be evident during the postoperative period, affecting brain functions which are involved in postoperative sleep architecture. So, the aim of this study will be to assess the effect of two different anesthetic techniques (propofol versus desflurane) of maintaining general anesthesia in patients subjected to similar major operations - Patients will be assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Questionnaire (PSQI), regarding preoperative and long term postoperative sleep quality, sleep diaries regarding early postoperative sleep quality and biochemical markers (cortisol, prolactin and melatonin) regarding neuroendocrine response to surgery and disturbances in endogenous circadian secretion associated with sleep
The objective of this study is to collect heart rate, respiration data and motion data of patients admitted to sleep lab and to determine the current accuracy level of the EarlySense system vs. the standard system, and predicate device for EarlySense (Embla) used in sleep lab in monitoring heart rate and respiration rates monitors (ECG, respiratory belts, oximeter) that are currently used in the sleep lab among different population (Obese, patients with or without apnea, patients with or without arrhythmia). It is emphasized that no interpretations or clinical decisions will be made based on data received from the ES study device.
The study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of melatonin supplementation in CKD and ESRD patients with sleep disorders to reduce sleep latency times, the number of apnea/hypopneic episodes, and prolong duration in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in CKD and ESRD patients with sleep disordered breathing.