中风后的睡眠:急性住院康复期间睡眠健康和中断的多模式评估及其对恢复的影响

Jacob Sindorf, Silvia Campagnini, Megan K O'Brien, Aashna Sunderrajan, Kristen L Knutson, Phyllis C Zee, Lisa Wolfe, Vineet M Arora, Arun Jayaraman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们对中风早期护理中的睡眠及其对康复结果的影响的了解仍然有限。本研究的目的是:(1)评估中风患者急性住院康复期间的多维睡眠健康和睡眠中断,(2)探索睡眠健康/睡眠中断与功能恢复之间的关系。方法对103例脑卒中患者急性住院康复期间的资料进行分析。通过患者报告、活动记录仪和生物识别传感器评估睡眠健康/中断。在入院和出院时测量功能结果。使用广义线性模型(GLMs)来描述睡眠健康随时间的变化,并使用多变量回归分析睡眠中断和睡眠相关的功能恢复预测因子。结果在住院期间,睡眠得到改善,睡眠发作后醒来减少23%,多次过夜中断减少15%。GLMs显示,睡眠质量的改善与夜间活动的减少和随着时间的推移心率的增加有关。较差的初始睡眠质量和认知状态与更多的夜间干扰有关。最后,睡眠健康和功能恢复之间的联系微乎其微。结论卒中住院康复期间睡眠健康状况普遍较差,但随时间推移有所改善。睡眠受神经恢复和医院环境的影响。夜间活动和自主生物标志物与感知的睡眠健康有关,生理和环境因素都会引发睡眠中断。功能恢复与睡眠健康的间接指标之间的关系需要进一步研究。这些发现揭示了关于住院患者睡眠的新见解,可以为早期有针对性的睡眠干预提供信息,以优化中风后的结果。SIESTA, ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04254484)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sleep Following a Stroke: Multimodal Evaluation of Sleep Health and Disruptions and Impact on Recovery During Acute Inpatient Rehabilitation.

BackgroundOur understanding of sleep during early stroke care and its impact on rehabilitation outcomes remains limited. The objectives of this work were to (1) evaluate multidimensional sleep health and disruptions during acute inpatient rehabilitation for individuals with stroke, and (2) explore the relationship between sleep health/disruptions and functional recovery.MethodsData from 103 individuals with stroke were analyzed during acute inpatient rehabilitation. Sleep health/disruptions were assessed via patient reports, actigraphy, and biometric sensors. Functional outcomes were measured at admission and discharge. Generalized Linear Models (GLMs) were used to describe changes in sleep health over time, and multivariate regressions analyzed sleep disruptions and sleep-related predictors of functional recovery.ResultsOver inpatient stays, sleep improved with a 23% reduction in wake after sleep onset and 15% fewer multiple overnight disruptions. GLMs revealed that improved sleep quality was associated with reduced overnight activity and increased heart rate over time. Poor initial sleep quality and cognitive status were associated with more overnight disruptions. Lastly, minimal associations were found between sleep health and functional recovery.ConclusionsSleep health during inpatient stroke rehabilitation is generally poor, though improves over time. Sleep is affected by neurological recovery and hospital environment. Overnight activity and autonomic biomarkers were associated with perceived sleep health, and both physiological and environmental factors triggered disruptions. The association between functional recovery and indirect indicators of sleep health requires further investigation. These findings reveal new insights about inpatient sleep which can inform early, targeted sleep interventions to optimize post-stroke outcomes.SIESTA, ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04254484).

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