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Sleep Wake Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sleep Wake Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT04232267 Completed - Sleep Disorder Clinical Trials

Analysis of Sleep Study Data to Assess Depressive Burden

SADB
Start date: January 13, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study evaluates the effectiveness of the MEB-001 device in assessing physiological parameters that provide a clinically significant depressive burden screener. This study uses objective physiological markers from MEB-001 to estimate the clinically significant depressive burden as subjectively reported by the subject with the Beck Depression Inventory - II (BDI-II).

NCT ID: NCT04227873 Not yet recruiting - Delirium Clinical Trials

Sleep and Cognition After Ambulatory Hip and Knee Arthroplasty

Start date: March 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sleep and rest are key elements in postoperative rehabilitation and recovery. There are complex relations between major surgery, sleep disturbance and complications. Major surgery leeds to severe postoperative sleep disturbances, initially reducing REM sleep time and disturbing the remaining sleep stages. Major surgery is again a risk factor for postoperative delirium and other cognitive impairment. The underlying mechanisms includes pain, opioid medication, sleep disturbances and neuroinflammation, along with external factors as noise during hospitalisation. The physiologic stress from sleep disturbances and sleep deprivation is associated with blood-brain barrier impairment, inflammation, decreased restitution, altered nociceptive function. Likewise, undiagnosed and untreated sleep apnea is a risk for postoperative complications and is itself affected by anesthesia and some analgesics (i.a. opioids). Fast-track surgery development has led to restitution period shortening, optimized pain management reducing opioid use, postoperative inflammatory stress response reduction and less delirium. Evolution of hip and knee arthroplasty(THA/TKA), organisation, optimized pain management and pharmacologic modification of inflammatory response by high dose steroid has permitted to perform these surgeries in an outpatient setting. Previous studies of fast-track THA/TKA using multimodal opioid-sparring analgesia, however neither using high dose steroids nor in an out patient setting, have demonstrated REM sleep period reduction from a normal range of 18% preoperatively to 1% postoperatively. However, changes in sleep architecture after THA/TKA in at setting attempting to minimise abnormal sleep by means of ambulatory surgery added to perioperative reduction of inflammatory response to surgery, pain and opioid use by high dose steroid, haven't been studied. The purpose of this study is to investigate how much an optimized ambulatory THA/TKA , reducing pain and inflammatory response to surgery and opioid use by high doses steroid can conserve the preoperative sleep architecture.

NCT ID: NCT04219566 Completed - Insomnia Clinical Trials

Vestibular Nerve Stimulation to Improve Sleep

Start date: March 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized, double blind sham controlled clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of vestibular nerve stimulation (VeNS) compared to a sham control a as a means of improving sleep as measured by ISI scores and EEG recordings The purpose of this investigation device study is to collect data that will be used to design appropriate pivotal studies that can be used for regulatory submissions, primarily in the United States of America (USA), but it may also be used to support submissions in other regions, including the European Union (EU).

NCT ID: NCT04214561 Enrolling by invitation - Pain Clinical Trials

Relationship Between Selected Parameters and Bruxism

WMU1/2019
Start date: December 16, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Bruxism is a common phenomenon. It is estimated that its prevalence in the adult population is 8-31%. Bruxism occurring during sleep is the activity of the masticatory muscles that appear during sleep, which can be rhythmic or phased and is not a movement disorder or sleep disorder in healthy people. It is currently believed that bruxism should not be considered a disorder. In healthy people, it is treated rather as behavior, which may be a risk factor for pathological clinical implications or a protective factor in the presence of other disease entities. The most common symptoms of bruxism include: pathological wear and tooth sensitivity, periodontal and oral mucosa damage, myalgia in the stomatognathic system, headache and prosthetic restoration damage. However, due to nocturnal occurrence, bruxism symptoms may go unnoticed for a long time, which means that patients are often unaware of this behavior. The etiology of bruxism is multifactorial and not fully understood. It is currently believed that it can be caused by genetic, psychological and exogenous factors. Due to the unclear etiology of bruxism, it is so important to conduct research that allows making a certain diagnosis and finding the causes of this phenomenon

NCT ID: NCT04214184 Recruiting - Sleep Deprivation Clinical Trials

Biomarkers of Increased Free Living Sleep Time

Start date: December 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This protocol will increase sleep duration in participants who maintain less than 6 hours sleep per night, to target the recommended 7 hours of sleep per night. The focus of this study is determine how increasing nightly sleep duration in these individuals who maintain less than 6 hours sleep per night changes their plasma metabolome and insulin sensitivity. The primary outcome will examine changes in branched-chain amino acids and the secondary outcome will examine changes in insulin sensitivity. The investigators will also determine if changes in plasma metabolites can be used as a biomarker to discriminate between adequate versus insufficient sleep.

NCT ID: NCT04210882 Completed - Aging Clinical Trials

The Effects of Exercise on Sleep and Brain Health

Start date: October 31, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Brain health and cognitive functioning can be affected by aging. Exercise is a potentially effective method for promoting "successful brain aging" by improving cardiovascular fitness, brain function and possibly sleep quality. This project will measure the effects of exercise on brain health and attempt to develop a better way to track brain health, by measuring brain activity during sleep.

NCT ID: NCT04207502 Recruiting - Aging Clinical Trials

Integrating Systematic Data of Geriatric Medicine to Explore the Solution for Health Aging

Start date: September 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This project aims to build up the comprehensive database of geriatric medicine for local Taiwanese.

NCT ID: NCT04201392 Recruiting - Insomnia Clinical Trials

Sleep in Psychiatric Inpatients

SPIN
Start date: August 31, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Decades of research have shown that sleep disturbances are common among patients with a wide range of psychiatric disorders. Such reported sleep disturbances include disrupted sleep efficiency and continuity, sleep quality complaints, insomnia, and nightmares. While traditional models suggest that certain sleep alterations are specific for certain mental disorders, newer models assume a transdiagnostic or dimensional view of sleep disturbances in mental disorders. Findings of a recent meta-analysis support the transdiagnostic or dimensional association between sleep disorders and psychiatric conditions. Additionally, the period just prior to sleep has recently received increased clinical and research interest, with studies investigating cognitive activity and rumination prior to sleep. However, only few studies compare sleep in different psychiatric diagnoses and the characteristics of sleep in different mental disorders are still not understood well enough for concrete implications for clinical practice. This is especially true for the population of psychiatric inpatients. In this study, the outcome measures and study variables will be measured with standardised and validated questionnaires, structured clinical interview, and a commercially available Fitbit Charge 2 tracker. Participants will be recruited from the inpatient units of the Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich (PUK). Screening will be conducted by the applicant and master's students enrolled in the project, using electronic patient files at the hospital. The patients will be invited to the study by their treating physician or psychologist. Assessments will consist of one interview and filling out of questionnaires (with a 30- to 45-minute duration respectively). A sub-sample will wear fill out a sleep diary for seven consecutive nights as well as wear a Fitbit Charge 2 tracker, which they will return a week later. Each patient will receive participant reimbursement of 30 Swiss francs (CHF) for their participation in the study.

NCT ID: NCT04200495 Completed - Healthy Clinical Trials

PSG Validation Study of Zensorium Biosensing Wearable Device

Start date: November 20, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study is to collect data comparing the Zensorium Biosensing Wearable Device (zBWD) to polysomnography (PSG) in individuals with Sleep-Wake Disorders. zBWD is similar to other wearable devices (e.g., fitbit and apple watch) that use an optical light sensor and Tri-axis Accelerometer to record steps, activity, sleep/awake states, sleep staging, and statistical variation of pulse pressure to track stress. Specifically, it is designed to report sleep duration, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and REM sleep duration. However, zBWD has not been validated against PSG for sleep tracking in healthy controls or in individuals with sleep-wake disorders.

NCT ID: NCT04170049 Recruiting - Sleep Disturbance Clinical Trials

The Effects of Sensory Stimulative Activities on Sleep Performance in Elderly Adults: A Single-case Design

Start date: April 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Older adults have a high prevalence of sleep disturbances, which negatively and severely impact their health and quality of life. Research indicated that 43% elderly outpatients in Taiwan have used benzodiazepine, which collectively led to great medical expenditure. Non-pharmacological treatments are highly recommended as first priority for sleep disturbance in practice. Music interventions have been reported to modulate the sympathetic nervous system and to improve the elderly's sleeping performance. Proprioceptive interventions can also activate the parasympathetic nervous system, providing calming effects and significantly reducing anxiety, hyperactivity and agitation in various populations. However, the effects of these intervention on the sleep disturbances in the elderly remain unclear. The research purpose is to investigate the effects of two sensory activities that are easily executed in everyday life - auditory (e.g. listening to the music before sleeping) and proprioceptive (e.g. joint compression exercises) interventions on improving the sleep performance of the elderly. Subjective sleeping quality assessment (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index & Insomnia Severity Index) and objective physiological records measured by actigraphy are used as outcome measures.