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Sleep stage distribution in persons with mild traumatic brain injury: a polysomnographic study according to American Academy of Sleep Medicine standards
Institution:1. Michigan State University, United States;2. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States;3. University of Michigan, United States
Abstract:Objective and backgroundSleep stage disruption in persons with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) has received little research attention. We examined deviations in sleep stage distribution in persons with mTBI relative to population age- and sex-specific normative data and the relationships between such deviations and brain injury-related, medical/psychiatric, and extrinsic factors.Patients and methodsWe conducted a cross-sectional polysomnographic investigation in 40 participants diagnosed with mTBI (mean age 47.54 ± 11.30 years; 56% males).MeasurementsAt the time of investigation, participants underwent comprehensive clinical and neuroimaging examinations and one full-night polysomnographic study. We used the 2012 American Academy of Sleep Medicine recommendations for recording, scoring, and summarizing sleep stages. We compared participants' sleep stage data with normative data stratified by age and sex to yield z-scores for deviations from available population norms and then employed stepwise multiple regression analyses to determine the factors associated with the identified significant deviations.ResultsIn patients with mTBI, the mean duration of nocturnal wakefulness was higher and consolidated sleep stage N2 and REM were lower than normal (p < 0.0001, p = 0.018, and p = 0.010, respectively). In multivariate regression analysis, several covariates accounted for the variance in the relative changes in sleep stage duration. No sex differences were observed in the mean proportion of non-REM or REM sleep.ConclusionsWe observed longer relative nocturnal wakefulness and shorter relative N2 and REM sleep in patients with mTBI, and these outcomes were associated with potentially modifiable variables. Addressing disruptions in sleep architecture in patients with mTBI could improve their health status.
Keywords:Nocturnal wakefulness  REM sleep  Non-REM sleep  Slow-wave sleep  Sex differences  Normative data
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