Evaluation of the Noga System: Detecting of Respiratory Related Sleep Disorders in Cardiac Patients...
Sleep ApneaMedical literature has shown that 1 out of 2 patients that are admitted to the hospital as a cardiac patient, will be found suffering from sleep breathing disorders. The medical literature also shows that there is an advantage of treating the sleep breathing disorders in addition to treating the cardiac disease or evaluating the heart failure condition to provide better clinical outcomes.this study is evaluating the ability to detect sleep and cardiac related breathing disordered.
Sleep Quality in Patients With Advanced Cancer
Sleep DisordersNeoplasmsThe primary focus of this clinical study is the objective and subjective measurements of sleep quality in patients with advanced cancer using opioids. It also examines sleep disturbances and associations between sleep quality and symptoms in order to improve symptom management in patients with advanced cancer. The overall aim of this study is to improve the clinical understanding of sleep quality in patients with advanced cancer using opioids and to improve the understanding of how sleep quality may best be measured in order to improve symptom management.
Sleep Wake and Melatonin Pattern in Craniopharyngioma
Sleep DisordersCircadian Rhythm1 moreThe hypothalamus is a part of the brain containing a number of nuclei with a variety of functions. It is central in the regulation of hormone secretion, sleep, and circadian functions. The suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus is a key component in controlling circadian rhythms and generates the rhythm of melatonin secretion from the pineal gland and cortisol secretion. Both melatonin and cortisol are involved in the regulation of circadian rhythms and sleep. Craniopharyngiomas are a type of brain tumors that usually affect the hypothalamus indirectly. In general, they are locally aggressive invading crucial structures e.g. the hypothalamus, the pituitary, and the optic nerve. Compared to healthy controls, craniopharyngioma patients have previously been reported with impaired quality of life, increased self-reported general and physical fatigue, increased daytime sleepiness, and increased prevalence of severe sleepiness Damage to the hypothalamus by local tumour or its treatment might involve the suprachiasmatic nucleus and thereby melatonin secretion leading to disturbed circadian function causing clinical manifestations in terms of daytime sleepiness and fatigue. The investigators aimed to assess the influence of craniopharyngiomas or their treatment on melatonin secretion, and the association with sleep pattern, sleep quality, fatigue, and sleepiness. 15 patients with craniopharyngioma and 15 gender, age, and BMI matched healthy controls were included. Salivary melatonin and cortisol were measured over a 24h-period. Sleep-wake patterns were characterized by two weeks of actigraphy recordings and sleep diaries. Sleepiness, fatigue, sleep quality, and general health were assessed by questionnaires.
Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire: Use for Collection of Clinical Data
Sleep DisordersThe purpose of this study is to develop a questionnaire that can be used for standardized patient information gathering in the clinical setting. This will serve as the information source for a pediatric sleep database.
Risk and Benefit Assessment of Hypnotic Agents for Sleep Disorders Among Elderly
Sleep DisordersThe aims of this study are to (1) examine the medication use patterns of commonly prescribed hypnotics and the factors that were associated with the long-term and short-term use patterns among the elderly population in Taiwan; (2)investigate the associations of using hypnotics with the elderly patients' disease statuses, efficacy and safety, as well as its pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic characteristics;(3) determine the clinical, economic and humanistic outcomes of using hypnotics and the corresponding contributing factors for the elderly in Taiwan.
Sleep and Survival in Colorectal Cancer
Colorectal NeoplasmCircadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder3 moreObjective The objective of the current trial is to investigate the effect of perioperative sleep and circadian rhythm on the natural course of survival among patient diagnosed with colorectal cancer. Concurrently, outcome measures like depression, fatigue, quality of life, and co-morbidity will be measured continuously in the short-, intermediate- and long-term period following diagnosis. The a-priori hypothesis is that preoperative sleep and circadian disturbances is a prognostic marker of reduced overall survival. Likewise, preoperative sleep-wake disturbances at baseline are expected to result in overall universally reduced quality of life, increased depression and fatigue. Furthermore, development of sleep-wake disturbances in the postoperative period as compared to preoperative sleep-wake rhythm is expected to a prognostic marker of negative outcomes. Target and study population The study population are all patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer in Region Zealand recruited consecutively from the trial initiation until study end each patient with an intended 5 year follow-up period. All available cases will be included in the trial. Study design The study will be an observational prospective cohort study applying a longituditional repeated measure design. Exposures and outcomes of interest The primary outcomes in the trial are sleep and circadian outcomes measured via actigraphy in the perioperative period. Furthermore, cancer related survival and overall survival in the 5 year follow-up period is considered primary outcomes. Secondary outcomes consist of consecutively measured depression, fatigue, quality of life, follow-up treatment and co-morbidity. Exposure variables are primary related to the cancer, i.e. cancer stage, surgical treatment, oncological treatment, baseline co-morbidity and pharmacological treatment. Some of the secondary outcomes could be expected to serve as confounding or mediating factors. Meaningful control for confounding will in the analysis phase be cancer stage and baseline sleep-wake rhythm status. Sampling methods All available cases will be sought included in the trial. No formal sample size has been performed and continues inclusion into the trial will be performed during an 1,5 year period. Statistical analyses The relationship between overall survival and baseline sleep-wake rhythm will be investigated using survival statistics and/or multivariate logistic regression. Expected results The investigators expect to see a marked difference in overall survival among patients with sleep and circadian disturbances at baseline.
Analysis of Sleep Study Data to Assess Depressive Burden
Sleep DisorderDepressive; Behavioral Disorder1 moreThis study evaluates the effectiveness of the MEB-001 device in assessing physiological parameters that provide a clinically significant depressive burden screener. This study uses objective physiological markers from MEB-001 to estimate the clinically significant depressive burden as subjectively reported by the subject with the Beck Depression Inventory - II (BDI-II).
The Efficacy of Lower Dose Zolpidem for Achieving Satisfactory Sleep in Women With Disordered Sleep...
Sleep DisorderSleep difficulties are very common in adults in the U.S. today. Zolpidem (Ambien) is often prescribed as a first line agent to treat sleep difficulties in patients presenting with sleep related complaints to Primary Care Practitioners (PCP's). Zolpidem is currently available in two doses, 10 and 5 mg. These doses were developed in clinical studies carried out primarily on men. The first dose made clinically available, 10 mg, resulted in morbidity and mortality in many women because women metabolize Zolpidem at a slower rate than men, thus the half-life is longer. Women taking Zolpidem often had morning drowsiness, persistent sleepiness, and difficulty with tasks requiring coordination and judgement, such as motor vehicle operation. There were a number of well publicized motor vehicle crashes and fatalities attributed to Zolpidem, mostly among women. The company then produced a 5 mg dose; however, some women still reported side effects at the lower dose, suggesting persistent drug levels in the morning, when the drug purportedly should have been cleared from the body. These women would likely benefit from a lower dose, a dose personalized for their individual metabolisms and sleep difficulties. Lower doses of Zolpidem are only available from compounding pharmacies, which are not common, are expensive, do not take many insurances, and are not offered as an option to most patients. Vitae Industries, Inc. is a start-up tech company located in Providence, founded by a Brown University graduate, a chemical engineer, who has developed technology that can provide precisely varied amounts of drug for specific and variable personalized patient dosing. Personalized medicine is an area of great research and clinical interest to the medical community at large and the Brown University Medical School in particular. Brown also has a growing focus on issues of sex and gender in the rendering of clinical medical care. This technology has the potential to address both of these areas, providing the possibility of very specific, tailored drug dosing for men and women. This research was developed as a proof of concept study which will be carried out as a collaboration between Brown University Medical School/Lifespan physicians and the technical staff at Vitae Industries, Inc.. This work will be foundational and will serve as the medical and scientific justification for Vitae Industry's providing patient specific dosing of medications. For the purposes of this study, the medication to be tested, Zolpidem (Ambien) will be compounded by a licensed compounding Rhode Island pharmacy, PhusionRx, using standardized approaches to compounding and formulating pharmaceutical products. This study will use low doses of Zolpidem formulated by the licensed compounding pharmacy, PhusionRx. The investigators will provide graduated doses of Zolpidem to women participants meeting inclusion criteria who present to their primary care physician complaining of difficulty achieving satisfactory sleep. Participants will start at a dose of 0.5 mg of Zolpidem. Each day the quality of their sleep will be assessed by self-report. If they have not achieved satisfactory sleep at the starting dose of 0.5 mg, the will increase their dose daily by 0.5 mg until they reach the standard 5 mg dose or satisfactory sleep is achieved.
Well-Being in Medical Residents in the HIBA
Cognition DisordersDepression2 moreIt is necessary and important to design tools to evaluate a central aspect of medical residents formation. The research group has been working with resident well-being since a few years in order to improve the global quality of the education and working environment. The investigators present a plan to develop and validate a tool to assess residents well-being. A tool designed with this characteristics would be of much importance to monitored as a security event, managed and actively promoted well being in residents.
Effects of Internet - Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy on Sleep Problems Among Sample of Post-...
Sleep ProblemSleep problems become more prominent with aging and worse among post-menopause than perimenopause stage. The actual causes of sleep problems are unclear. However, it occurs commonly accompanied with or in the response of seriousness of menpausal symptoms as nocturnal hot flashes, mood disorders, and obstructive sleep apnea among menopauses. The Prevalence of sleep problems is variable ranged from 11.8 -62 % based on different studies. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the short-term form of psychotherapy, used for managing sleep problems and insomnia , an efficacious as pharmacological treatment.