Characterizing disrupted nighttime sleep and associated functional outcomes in youth with narcolepsy type 1.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine Pub Date : 2024-10-17 DOI:10.5664/jcsm.11416
Gillian Heckler, Jennifer Worhach, Grace Wang, Klara Szilagyi, Bo Zhang, Cecilia Diniz Behn, Thomas Scammell, Kiran Maski
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Abstract

Study objectives: Disrupted nighttime sleep (DNS) and sleep instability are common in children and adolescents with Narcolepsy Type 1 (NT1), but optimal objective sleep measures have not been determined. We compared self-reported and objective sleep measures between young people with NT1 and healthy controls (HC) and test the hypotheses that the Wake/N1 Index is the best objective measure of perceived nocturnal wakings vs. other DNS measures reported in the literature and is associated with daytime functional problems.

Methods: N=26 HC and N=27 NT1 participants ages 8-21 years completed a 15-item habitual sleep quality survey and an in-lab polysomnogram. We compared group survey responses and performed stepwise regression of sleep quality and instability measures with a survey question ("During the night, I wake more than once"). Last, we used logistic regression to identify associations between the Wake/N1 Index with daytime functional concerns across groups.

Results: Compared to HC, NT1 participants reported more frequent restless sleep, nighttime moaning/groaning/talking, tossing and turning, and nocturnal wakings (all p's < 0.01), but no greater difficulties in falling asleep or returning back to sleep. Across groups, self-reported waking from sleep was associated with increased Wake/N1 Index and SSRI/SNRI use. The Wake/N1 Index was associated with daytime fatigue but no other behavioral or cognitive concerns.

Conclusions: DNS is a multi-factorial complaint that differs from insomnia. We believe the Wake/N1 Index is a useful sleep instability measure that should be helpful in research and as a treatment target in clinical practice, especially for fatigue concerns.

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1型嗜睡症青少年夜间睡眠紊乱及相关功能结果的特征。
研究目的:夜间睡眠中断(DNS)和睡眠不稳定在患有 1 型嗜睡症(NT1)的儿童和青少年中很常见,但最佳的客观睡眠测量方法尚未确定。我们比较了患有 NT1 的青少年和健康对照组(HC)的自我报告和客观睡眠测量方法,并检验了以下假设:与文献报道的其他 DNS 测量方法相比,唤醒/N1 指数是感知夜间觉醒的最佳客观测量方法,并且与日间功能问题相关:方法:年龄在 8-21 岁之间的 26 名 HC 和 27 名 NT1 参与者完成了一项包含 15 个项目的习惯性睡眠质量调查和一项实验室多导睡眠图检查。我们比较了各组的调查回答,并用一个调查问题("在夜间,我醒来超过一次")对睡眠质量和不稳定性测量进行了逐步回归。最后,我们使用逻辑回归法来确定各组的觉醒/N1指数与白天功能问题之间的关联:与高危人群相比,NT1 参与者更频繁地出现睡眠不安、夜间呻吟/呻吟/说话、辗转反侧和夜间惊醒(所有 p 均小于 0.01),但入睡或再次入睡的困难并没有增加。在所有组别中,自我报告的睡眠觉醒与觉醒/N1指数和SSRI/SNRI的使用增加有关。唤醒/N1指数与日间疲劳有关,但与其他行为或认知问题无关:DNS是一种不同于失眠的多因素主诉。我们认为,唤醒/N1 指数是一种有用的睡眠不稳定性测量方法,应有助于研究并作为临床实践中的治疗目标,尤其是针对疲劳问题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
7.00%
发文量
321
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine focuses on clinical sleep medicine. Its emphasis is publication of papers with direct applicability and/or relevance to the clinical practice of sleep medicine. This includes clinical trials, clinical reviews, clinical commentary and debate, medical economic/practice perspectives, case series and novel/interesting case reports. In addition, the journal will publish proceedings from conferences, workshops and symposia sponsored by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine or other organizations related to improving the practice of sleep medicine.
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