View clinical trials related to Sleep Wake Disorders.
Filter by:Study objectives are to determine the efficacy, safety and tolerability of bright light treatment in Parkinson's Disease (PD) patients with daytime sleepiness. Thirty PD patients will be enrolled and equally randomized to bright light or dim-red light treatment. Objective (actigraphy) and subjective (sleep logs/scales) sleep measures will be collected through the baseline and intervention phases of the study. The primary outcome measure will be the change in the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) comparing the bright light treatment with dim-red light treatment. Secondary outcome measures will include the Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT), global Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) score, Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale (PDSS) score, and actigraphy measures. A variety of exploratory analyses will examine the effects of bright light treatment on fatigue, depression, quality of life, cognition, and motor disability. Hypothesis: Bright light exposure will diminish daytime sleepiness and improve night-time sleep in PD patients with daytime sleepiness.
Circadian rhythm disorders are a class of sleep disorders characterized by misalignment between the timing of sleep and the timing of rhythms driven by the biological clock. Light therapy can effectively treat these disorders, but the intensity and duration of light exposure required to do so has limited its practical use. In this study the investigators will test whether pre-exposure to dim light may enhance the response of the circadian system to light therapy. If so, this could result in shorter treatments that would have greater practical applications.
The purpose of this study is to determine the factors that are associated with improved cardiovascular function with the use of CPAP therapy on subjects diagnosed with moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea.
The present study will investigate in humans the enzyme inhibition effects of SB-649868 on CYP3A4, using Simvastatin and Atorvastatin as CYP3A4 probe substrates, administered as single doses: alone, and on two different occasions after repeat doses of SB-649868, at the same time as SB-649868 and 2h before SB-649868.
The goal of this project is to determine whether the sleep and circadian rhythms of critically ill patients undergoing mechanical ventilation can be improved through practical strategies that can be employed at the bedside.
This is a pilot research study examining two types of behavioral counseling along with the nicotine patch for smoking cessation. The study is designed to find out whether one of these counseling interventions is more effective for smoking cessation among individuals with sleep problems. The study has three parts: 1) an intake session; 2) a 10-week treatment phase, and 3) a 1-month follow-up.
Fibromyalgia is a condition of chronic widespread pain, sleep disturbance and fatigue. Most of the patients with fibromyalgia complain of either non-restorative sleep or complaints of disturbed sleep due to pain. The study aimed at examining the effects of milnacipran on sleep disturbance in patients with fibromyalgia. The study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled, two way crossover polysomnography (PSG) study to explore the effects of milnacipran on sleep disturbance. Patients received either milnacipran 50 mg twice a day (BID) or matching placebo.
Research study that will test a portable device (CPC M1) that records: body movement; heart activity (ECG; snoring; and body position during sleep. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved this device for use except in a research setting. The purposes of this study are to: a) determine if the ECG data collected using the CPC M1 device is at least as good as the ECG data collected during a diagnostic, in-lab polysomnogram (PSG) (or sleep study) and b) determine if in-home monitoring with the device will provide similar results compared to an in-lab PSG.
Endothelial dysfunction, or abnormal functioning of the lining of blood vessels, appears to be a key process in the development of cardiovascular disease. Endothelial dysfunction appears to be caused by both sleep disordered breathing and obesity. As endothelial dysfunction is among the first clinical marker that predicts future cardiovascular events, understanding molecular mechanisms leading to impairment of endothelial function is very important. Endothelial function requires the proper functioning of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). eNOS activity is tightly regulated by caveolin-1, a protein important in the formation of cellular structures called caveolae. Low levels of caveolin-1 facilitate optimal nitric oxide synthesis in endothelial cells as caveolin-1 helps to spatially organize eNOS in close proximity to signaling proteins that are important for eNOS activation. In certain diseases however, the balance of caveolin-1 and eNOS can be disrupted resulting in impaired nitric oxide synthesis and leading to endothelial dysfunction. The investigators therefore seek to characterize levels of caveolin-1, and correlate this with the presence or absence of sleep disordered breathing, obesity, and cardiovascular disease. The current IRB protocol covers the performance of fat biopsies on subjects who have recently completed a sleep study either in the Center for Sleep Medicine or in our sleep laboratory and were found to have sleep disordered breathing or no sleep disordered breathing, subject with sleep disordered breathing who have been treated successfully with continuous positive airway pressure for 3-6 months, and subjects undergoing other studies in our lab who are obese or non-obese and subjects who have known cardiovascular disease and subjects without known cardiovascular disease.
The purpose of this study is to find out what effects Exposure, Rescripting, and Relaxation Therapy (ERRT) has on nightmares and associated problems in veterans.