Effect of Preoperative Sleep Disorders on Postoperative Enteral Nutrition Intolerance in Patients with Digestive Tract Tumors: A Prospective Cohort Study.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Nature and Science of Sleep Pub Date : 2025-10-17 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.2147/NSS.S539712
Moxi Chen, Wentao Zhong, Tian Yu, Can Cao, Hongyun Huang, Jianchun Yu
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Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the effect of preoperative sleep disorders (SD) on postoperative enteral nutrition intolerance (ENI) and intestinal barrier, and explore its potential mechanism.

Patients and methods: This study was a prospective cohort study that included 67 patients (26 in SD group and 41 in non-SD group) undergoing digestive tract tumor surgery. Preoperative sleep status was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Postoperative ENI was evaluated using the Enteral Nutrition Tolerance Scale. Perioperative serum cortisol, intestinal barrier markers (D-lactate, diamine oxidase and human lipopolysaccharide binding protein), ferroptosis markers (ferrous ions, reduced glutathione and lipid peroxide malondialdehyde) and intestinal flora characteristics were measured.

Results: The incidence of ENI in SD group was 53.8%, which was significantly higher than that in non-SD group (26.8%, P=0.038). Perioperative levels of serum intestinal barrier markers in SD group were higher than those in non-SD group (P<0.05). The preoperative cortisol level was positively correlated with the increase in the intestinal barrier marker human lipopolysaccharide binding protein (r=0.3621, P=0.0170) and ferroptosis marker malondialdehyde (r=0.3660, P=0.0171). In SD group, the relative abundance of opportunistic pathogens (Enterobacteriaceae, Burkholderiaceae, etc) increased, while the relative abundance of probiotics (Bifidobacteriaceae) decreased.

Conclusion: Preoperative sleep disturbances were significantly associated with the occurrence of postoperative enteral nutrition intolerance in patients with gastrointestinal tumors. The intestinal barrier damage of these patients may be related to hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation, oxidative stress induction and intestinal flora imbalance.

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术前睡眠障碍对消化道肿瘤患者术后肠内营养不耐受的影响:一项前瞻性队列研究
目的:探讨术前睡眠障碍(SD)对术后肠内营养不耐受(ENI)和肠道屏障的影响,并探讨其潜在机制。患者和方法:本研究为前瞻性队列研究,纳入67例消化道肿瘤手术患者(SD组26例,非SD组41例)。术前睡眠状态评估采用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数。术后ENI采用肠内营养耐受量表进行评估。测定围手术期血清皮质醇、肠屏障标志物(d -乳酸、二胺氧化酶和人脂多糖结合蛋白)、铁中毒标志物(亚铁离子、还原性谷胱甘肽和脂质过氧化丙二醛)和肠道菌群特征。结果:SD组ENI发生率为53.8%,显著高于非SD组(26.8%,P=0.038)。SD组围手术期血清肠屏障标志物水平高于非SD组(p)。结论:术前睡眠障碍与胃肠道肿瘤患者术后肠内营养不耐受的发生显著相关。这些患者的肠道屏障损伤可能与下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴激活、氧化应激诱导和肠道菌群失衡有关。
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来源期刊
Nature and Science of Sleep
Nature and Science of Sleep Neuroscience-Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
245
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Nature and Science of Sleep is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal covering all aspects of sleep science and sleep medicine, including the neurophysiology and functions of sleep, the genetics of sleep, sleep and society, biological rhythms, dreaming, sleep disorders and therapy, and strategies to optimize healthy sleep. Specific topics covered in the journal include: The functions of sleep in humans and other animals Physiological and neurophysiological changes with sleep The genetics of sleep and sleep differences The neurotransmitters, receptors and pathways involved in controlling both sleep and wakefulness Behavioral and pharmacological interventions aimed at improving sleep, and improving wakefulness Sleep changes with development and with age Sleep and reproduction (e.g., changes across the menstrual cycle, with pregnancy and menopause) The science and nature of dreams Sleep disorders Impact of sleep and sleep disorders on health, daytime function and quality of life Sleep problems secondary to clinical disorders Interaction of society with sleep (e.g., consequences of shift work, occupational health, public health) The microbiome and sleep Chronotherapy Impact of circadian rhythms on sleep, physiology, cognition and health Mechanisms controlling circadian rhythms, centrally and peripherally Impact of circadian rhythm disruptions (including night shift work, jet lag and social jet lag) on sleep, physiology, cognition and health Behavioral and pharmacological interventions aimed at reducing adverse effects of circadian-related sleep disruption Assessment of technologies and biomarkers for measuring sleep and/or circadian rhythms Epigenetic markers of sleep or circadian disruption.
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