在社区居住的中风幸存者中,睡眠与情绪和认知抱怨之间的双向时间关联:一项生态瞬时评估研究。

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION PM&R Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-03 DOI:10.1002/pmrj.13108
Stephen C L Lau, Martica L Hall, Lauren Terhorst, Elizabeth R Skidmore
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引用次数: 0

摘要

睡眠在日常功能和中风恢复中起着关键作用,但在中风康复中却很少受到关注。睡眠障碍与情感和认知障碍有关,但睡眠与情感和认知障碍之间的时间联系尚不清楚。了解这些时间关联可能为干预和预防提供新的方向,以支持中风的持续恢复。目的:探讨社区居住脑卒中幸存者睡眠与情感和认知主诉之间的双向时间关联。设计:对一项涉及7天生态瞬时评估(EMA)的纵向观察研究进行二次分析,在此期间,参与者完成了8次EMA调查和每天的睡眠日记。采用多层次建模对数据进行分析。设置:社区。参与者:社区居住的中风幸存者(N=40)。干预措施:不适用。主要结果测量:EMA测量抑郁情绪、愉快情绪和认知抱怨。使用睡眠日记测量睡眠质量和持续时间。结果:人间睡眠质量与次日抑郁情绪呈负相关(B=- 0.16;p= 0.028),与次日愉悦情绪呈正相关(B= 0.63;p小时),与次日认知抱怨呈正相关(B= 0.13;p= 0.002);而认知疾病与第二天晚上长时间睡眠的可能性较高相关(OR= 0.25;p= 0.047)。结论:本研究确定了中风幸存者日常生活中睡眠与情感和认知抱怨之间的双向关联。研究结果表明,针对睡眠质量和持续时间的干预措施可能会影响认知抱怨,反之亦然。这篇文章受版权保护。版权所有。
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Bidirectional temporal associations between sleep and affect and cognitive symptoms among community-dwelling stroke survivors: An ecological momentary assessment study.

Introduction: Sleep plays a critical role in daily functioning and stroke recovery but receives little attention in stroke rehabilitation. Sleep disturbances are linked to affective and cognitive impairments, but temporal associations between sleep and affect and cognitive symptoms are less clear. Understanding these temporal associations may inform new directions in intervention and prevention to support continued stroke recovery.

Objective: To examine the bidirectional temporal associations between sleep and affect and cognitive symptoms among community-dwelling stroke survivors.

Design: A secondary analysis of a longitudinal observational study involving 7 days of ecological momentary assessment (EMA), during which participants completed eight EMA surveys and a sleep diary per day. Multilevel modeling was used to analyze data.

Setting: Community.

Participants: Community-dwelling stroke survivors (N = 40).

Interventions: Not applicable.

Main outcome measures: EMA measures of depressed affect, cheerful affect, and cognitive symptoms. Sleep quality and duration as measured using a sleep diary.

Results: Between-person sleep quality was negatively associated with next-day depressed affect (B = -.16; p = .028) and positively associated with next-day cheerful affect (B = .63; p < .001). Inversely, between-person depressed affect was negatively associated with next night sleep quality (B = -.77; p = .015), and vice versa for cheerful affect (between-person: B = .45; p < .001; within-person: B = .09; p = .008). Long sleep (>9 hours) was positively associated with next-day cognitive symptoms (B = .13; p = .002), whereas cognitive symptoms were associated with a higher odds of long sleep the following night (odds ratio [OR] = 0.25; p = .047).

Conclusions: This study identified the bidirectional associations of sleep with affect and cognitive symptoms in the context of the everyday life of stroke survivors. The findings suggest that interventions addressing sleep quality and duration may impact affect and cognitive symptoms, and vice versa.

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来源期刊
PM&R
PM&R REHABILITATION-SPORT SCIENCES
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
4.80%
发文量
187
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Topics covered include acute and chronic musculoskeletal disorders and pain, neurologic conditions involving the central and peripheral nervous systems, rehabilitation of impairments associated with disabilities in adults and children, and neurophysiology and electrodiagnosis. PM&R emphasizes principles of injury, function, and rehabilitation, and is designed to be relevant to practitioners and researchers in a variety of medical and surgical specialties and rehabilitation disciplines including allied health.
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