scholarly journals Sleep and salivary cortisol in preterm neonates: a clinical, randomized, controlled, crossover study

2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (suppl 3) ◽  
pp. 1358-1365
Author(s):  
Fabrícia Magalhães Araújo ◽  
Mavilde da Luz Gonçalves Pedreira ◽  
Ariane Ferreira Machado Avelar ◽  
Márcia Lurdes de Cácia Pradella-Hallinan ◽  
Miriam Harumi Tsunemi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Objective: Analyze the influence of ear protectors on the baseline levels of salivary cortisol and response and total sleep time of preterm neonates during two periods of environmental management of a neonatal intermediate care unit. Method: A clinical, randomized, controlled and crossover study conducted with 12 preterm neonates. The use of ear protectors was randomized in two periods. Sleep evaluation was performed using one Alice 5 Polysomnography System and unstructured observation. Results: No significant difference was observed between the baseline levels of salivary cortisol and response in preterm neonates from the control and experimental groups, and no statistical significance was observed between the total sleep time of both groups. No relationship was observed between the baseline levels of cortisol and response and total sleep time. Conclusion: Ear protectors in preterm neonates did not influence the salivary cortisol level and total sleep time in the studied periods.

2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 260-267
Author(s):  
Mônica Hiromi Sato ◽  
Mavilde da Luz Gonçalves Pedreira ◽  
Ariane Ferreira Machado Avelar ◽  
Miriam Harumi Tsunemi ◽  
Kelly Cristina Sbampato Calado Orsi ◽  
...  

The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of ear protectors on the sleep of preterm newborns during the “quiet” times in intermediate care nursery. This was a clinical, randomized, controlled crossover study conducted in two neonatal units in São Paulo, Brazil. The sample consisted of preterm infants who met the inclusion and exclusion criteria for the study. Polysomnography and unstructured observation were used for data collection. Twenty-four preterm infants with a mean gestational age of 33.2 weeks and current weight of 1.747 g were analyzed. There was no significant difference in the total sleep time of preterm infants with and without the use of ear protectors. Newborns with lower gestational age showed a significant reduction in total sleep time with the use of ear protectors ( p < .05). The use of ear protection did not increase the total sleep time for preterm infants.


Author(s):  
Christos M. Polymeropoulos ◽  
Justin Brooks ◽  
Emily L. Czeisler ◽  
Michaela A. Fisher ◽  
Mary M. Gibson ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose To assess the efficacy of tasimelteon to improve sleep in Smith–Magenis syndrome (SMS). Methods A 9-week, double-blind, randomized, two-period crossover study was conducted at four US clinical centers. Genetically confirmed patients with SMS, aged 3 to 39, with sleep complaints participated in the study. Patients were assigned to treatment with tasimelteon or placebo in a 4-week crossover study with a 1-week washout between treatments. Eligible patients participated in an open-label study and were followed for >3 months. Results Improvement of sleep quality (DDSQ50) and total sleep time (DDTST50) on the worst 50% of nights were primary endpoints. Secondary measures included actigraphy and behavioral parameters. Over three years, 52 patients were screened, and 25 patients completed the randomized portion of the study. DDSQ50 significantly improved over placebo (0.4, p = 0.0139), and DDTST50 also improved (18.5 minutes, p = 0.0556). Average sleep quality (0.3, p = 0.0155) and actigraphy-based total sleep time (21.1 minutes, p = 0.0134) improved significantly, consistent with the primary outcomes. Patients treated for ≥90 days in the open-label study showed persistent efficacy. Adverse events were similar between placebo and tasimelteon. Conclusion Tasimelteon safely and effectively improved sleep in SMS.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (5) ◽  
pp. 695-700

Objective: To compare the effects of immediate versus delayed cord clamping on neonatal outcomes in preterm neonates of gestational age of 32 to 36⁺⁶ weeks, and maternal outcomes. Materials and Methods: A randomized controlled trial was conducted in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department at Bhumibol Adulyadej Hospital, in Bangkok, Thailand. The study compared the effects of immediate to delayed cord clamping at 60 seconds among preterm neonates born between 32 weeks, 0 day and 36 weeks, 6 days of gestation between August and October 2018. Results: The mean age of the participants was 26 years old, and half of the cases were nulliparous. One hundred ten women were randomly separated into two equal groups (n=55). Delayed cord clamping at 60 seconds increased hematocrit levels (Hct) in both two (p=0.004) and 48 (p<0.001) hours after delivery compared to the immediate cord clamping group. There were no differences in exposing the neonate to hypothermia, hypoxemia, Apgar score at 1-minute, polycythemia, intraventricular hemorrhage, hyperbilirubinemia, length of stay in hospital, and affecting the process of resuscitation. There were no statistical differences between the two groups in maternal outcomes such as retained placenta and postpartum hemorrhage. Conclusion: Delayed cord clamping at 60 seconds increased Hct in the newborn at two to 48 hours after birth. There was no significant difference in adverse maternal and neonatal complications within both groups. Keywords: Delayed cord clamping, Hematocrit, Preterm


2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-389
Author(s):  
Margarethe Thaisi Garro Knebel ◽  
Adriano Ferreti Borgatto ◽  
Marcus Vinicius Veber Lopes ◽  
Priscila Cristina Santos ◽  
Thiago Sousa Matias ◽  
...  

SLEEP ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A187-A187
Author(s):  
V Svetnik ◽  
T Wang ◽  
P Ceesay ◽  
O Ceren ◽  
E Snyder ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Suvorexant, an orexin receptor antagonist that enables sleep to occur via competitive antagonism of wake-promoting orexins, improved total sleep time (TST) in a sleep laboratory polysomnography (PSG) study of patients with AD and insomnia. Here we report on the effects of suvorexant on sleep architecture in the study. Methods This was a randomized, double-blind, 4-week trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02750306). Participants who met diagnostic criteria for both probable AD dementia (of mild to moderate severity) and insomnia were randomized to suvorexant 10mg (could be increased to 20mg based on clinical response) or matching placebo. Overnight sleep laboratory PSG was performed on 3 nights: screening, baseline, and Night-29 (last night of dosing). Suvorexant differences from placebo in changes-from-baseline at Night-29 for sleep architecture were analyzed as exploratory endpoints. Results A total of 274 participants were included in the analysis (suvorexant N=135, placebo N=139). At Night-29, suvorexant improved TST by 28 minutes versus placebo (p=0.001). There were no significant differences between suvorexant and placebo in the % of TST spent in REM (1.3%, 95% CI: -0.5, 3.0), N1 (0.6%, 95% CI: -1.2, 2.5), N2 (-1.0%, 95% CI: -3.2, 1.2), or N3 (-0.6%, 95% CI: -1.8, 0.6). There was no significant difference between suvorexant and placebo in latency to REM (-5.4 minutes, 95% CI: -23.4, 12.7). Conclusion Suvorexant improves TST without altering the underlying sleep architecture in AD patients with insomnia. Support Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA


SLEEP ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. A138-A138
Author(s):  
Jerry Wing-Fai Yeung ◽  
Branda Yee-Man Yu ◽  
John Yuen ◽  
Janice Ho ◽  
Ka-Fai Chung ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Acupuncture is an alternative treatment for improving sleep quality and the effectiveness is thought to be optimized with an individualized approach resembling real practice. However, existing evidence is limited by methodological shortcomings due to blinding issues, standardized measures, and diagnostic procedures. It was of the present study’s interest to examine the efficacy and safety of semi-individualized acupuncture treatment on insomnia. Methods Adults with DSM-5 insomnia disorder (n = 140) were randomized with 1:1 allocation to a 4-week intervention traditional acupuncture (TA) or validated non-invasive sham acupuncture (SA). The selection of acupoints was semi-individualized by the acupuncturist. As the primary outcome, the sleep efficiency (SE) by sleep diary was assessed at baseline, 1-week posttreatment, and 5-week posttreatment. Other sleep parameters derived from sleep diary, the wrist-actigraphy-derived sleep parameters, insomnia symptom severity, anxiety, and depressive symptoms, as well as the health-related quality of life, were also evaluated. Results Although linear mixed-effect model revealed both groups did not attain significant difference in sleep-diary-derived SE and other outcome measures (all P &gt; 0.05), TA promising effect on improving insomnia symptom (within-group effect size, d = 1.13 & 1.30 at 1-week & 5-week posttreatment respectively) and also a higher proportion of subjects achieved SE ≥ 85% compared with SA (55.6% versus 36.4% at week 9, P = 0.03). Besides, subjects in TA group reported significantly greater improvement in both the total sleep time (TST) derived from sleep diary and actigraph than those in the SA group at 1-week posttreatment (difference in mean changes from baseline: sleep diary = 22.0 min, p = 0.01; actigraphy =18.8 min, P = 0.02) but not 5-week posttreatment. Conclusion This study is the first to evaluate the effect of the TCM-theory-based individualized acupuncture on sleep using a sham-control design. A 4-week semi-individualized acupuncture is able to significantly increase total sleep time with few adverse events. Support (if any) Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, Early Career Scheme (Project no.: 25101017)


2010 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 437-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Harumi Kozasa ◽  
Helena Hachul ◽  
Carlos Monson ◽  
Luciano Pinto Jr. ◽  
Marcelo Csermak Garcia ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: As insomnia is highly prevalent, and side effects of medication are well-known, mind-body interventions are increasingly being sought. The objective of this study is to present a narrative review regarding the effects of mind-body interventions for the treatment of insomnia. METHOD: A PubMed search was conducted including only randomized, controlled trials in which the main objective was to treat insomnia. DISCUSSION: Twelve studies were selected. In three of the studies, objective parameters (polysomnography) were analyzed. Mind-body interventions were able to improve sleep efficiency and total sleep time. Most can ameliorate sleep quality; some can reduce the use of hypnotic drugs in those who are dependent on these drugs. CONCLUSION: According to the studies we selected, self-reported sleep was improved by all mind-body treatments, among them yoga, relaxation, Tai Chi Chih and music. Cognitive behavioral therapy seems to be the most effective mind-body intervention. Cognitive behavioral therapy was the only intervention that showed better results than medication. However, considering that only five of the twelve studies chosen reached a score of 3 in the Jadad scale, new studies with a higher methodological quality have to be conducted especially in mind-body interventions that belong to the complementary or alternative medicine field.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2147-2147
Author(s):  
Patricia E Davenport ◽  
Hsuan-Hao Fan ◽  
Emily Nolton ◽  
Henry Feldman ◽  
Viola Lorenz ◽  
...  

Abstract Thrombocytopenia affects 18-35% of all neonates in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and ~70% of those born extremely prematurely, with sepsis being a frequent cause. Platelet transfusions (PTx) are frequently given to septic preterm neonates at higher platelet count (PC) thresholds than those used in adults, in an attempt to reduce their bleeding risk. However, in the largest randomized trial of neonatal PTx thresholds, infants transfused at a higher PC threshold had a significantly higher mortality and/or major bleeding compared to infants transfused at a lower threshold. We hypothesized that the deleterious effects of PTx would be related to a potential "developmental mismatch" resulting from adult platelets being transfused into a neonate. Among other developmental differences, adult platelets (human and murine) exhibit significantly higher surface P-selectin expression following activation than neonatal platelets. P-selectin is essential for the interaction of platelets with immune cells. Thus, we hypothesized that adult platelets transfused into septic neonates would be consumed faster than endogenous neonatal platelets (due to higher potential for immune interaction), and would increase inflammation and mortality. To test these hypotheses, we used a published murine model of neonatal sepsis, consisting of injecting cecal slurry (CS) into C57BL/6 pups. CS batches were prepared by isolating the cecal content of adult C57BL/6 mice, which was weighted, aliquoted and frozen until use. Three different CS batches were prepared and injected IP into post-natal day 10 pups at a dose of 1.1 (CS1) or 1.0 mg/g (CS2 and 3). Two hours after infection, pups were transfused with washed platelets from adult GFP mice (5x10 7 platelets/g) or Tyrode's buffer (control). Weights, PCs and GFP platelet % were measured before, 4h and 24h post-infection. Blood was collected via terminal bleed at 24h, and plasma separated for quantification of 31 cytokines by multiplex. Despite identical preparation, CS batches varied greatly in their 24h mortality (11% vs 73% vs. 30% for CS1, 2 and 3, respectively). Moreover, PTx had different effects on the mortality of pups infected with different CS batches, increasing the 24h mortality of pups infected with CS1 (30% in transfused vs 11% in non-transfused, RR 2.70, 95% CI 1.02-7.15) but decreasing the mortality of pups infected with CS2 (46% vs. 73%) or CS3 (9% vs. 30%), with a combined RR of 0.52; 95% CI 0.30-0.91. Bacterial counts differed between CS batches, but did not correlate with mortality. Comparison of the microbiome composition using deep sequencing revealed an increased presence of pathogenic bacterial species (Legionella, Sutterella, and Helicobacter species) in CS2 and 3 compared to CS1, and a relative abundance of beneficial bacterial (Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria) in CS1. Different CS batches also elicited different cytokine responses, with significant differences noted in G-CSF, IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-3, IL-7, IL-12p70, and IL-15 levels (p&lt;0.05). For all of these cytokines, except G-CSF, levels were lower in mice infected with CS1 compared to CS2 or 3. Next, we investigated the effects of PTx on the plasma cytokine profile of mice infected with CS1 or CS2/3 (combined), compared to their infected, non-transfused littermates. For nearly all cytokines, PTx increased the response after infection with CS1, but decreased it after infection with CS2/3, with a significant difference in mean global cytokine effect (p&lt;0.0001). For individual cytokines, however, these differences only reached statistical significance for LIX (CXCL5, p=0.04) and approached significance for IL15 and IL17 (p=0.06). Finally, we developed a mathematical model to compare the consumption of endogenous neonatal platelets (GFP-) to that of transfused adult platelets (GFP+) in pups infected with CS1 vs. CS2. In both, the calculated percent consumption was higher for adult platelets than for neonatal platelets (54.8% vs. 32.6% for CS1 and 56.5% vs. 40.4% for CS2). In conclusion, our findings support the hypothesis that adult transfused platelets are consumed faster than endogenous platelets in early neonatal sepsis, and demonstrate that platelet transfusions can either enhance or attenuate the neonatal inflammatory response and the mortality in a model of murine polymicrobial sepsis, depending on the bacterial composition of the inoculum and/or the severity of the sepsis. Disclosures Stowell: Grifols: Speakers Bureau; Argenx: Speakers Bureau; Alexion: Consultancy.


Author(s):  
Nitin Trivedi ◽  
Munish Kumar Kakkar ◽  
Divya Bohra ◽  
Jitendra Gupta ◽  
Yashu Saini

ABSTRACT Objective To analyze the variance in sleep habits of adolescents (10—18 years) in urban and rural Rajasthan. Design: Cross-sectional questionnaire-based study. Setting: Community based school survey in an urban and a rural setting. Subjects: School-going adolescents 10 to 18 years. Materials and methods A total of 565 adolescents aged 10 to 18 years were included. The questionnaire contained questions related to sleep habits. Each question was explained to the participants and their responses were noted. Outcome parameters were total sleep time. Results Out of 585 adolescents, 285 were residing in urban areas while 280 from rural areas. Total 43.3% adolescent were using bedroom for sleep only without any significant difference in rural and urban area. Alcohol consumption was seen in urban area only (n = 6) and mainly by 10 to 15 year age group. Urban adolescents on week days spend 7.15 hours of sleep while on week ends they spend 9.2 hours while In rural area week days sleep was 6.34 hours while at week ends it was 6.64 hours. So surprisingly sleep deprivation was more in rural area and there was not much variation in total sleep time in rural area on weekdays or weekend. How to cite this article Kakkar MK, Bohra D, Trivedi N, Gupta J, Saini Y. Sleep Patterns of Urban and Rural School- going Adolescents. J Mahatma Gandhi Univ Med Sci Tech 2016;1(1):20-23.


1972 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 463-469
Author(s):  
J. Naiman ◽  
R. Poitras ◽  
F. Engelsmann

The effect of chlorpromazine on the REM deprivation rebound was studied. Five normal subjects participated in the experiment which consisted of three periods of nine nights each. The first period was without medication, the second with medication and the third again without medication. Four dependent variables — Total Sleep Time, REM latency, REM time and REM percentage — were measured in each period as follows: baseline — three nights, REM deprivation — two nights and recovery — four nights. Analysis of variance (three-way classification) was computed in order to evaluate both the main effects as well as the interaction between medication and sleep conditions. The results showed significant difference over the three conditions of sleep — baseline, REM deprivation and recovery. While there were no significant differences due to medication the replication of the measurements in the same subjects proved to be a slightly significant source of the variance of the scores in all variables except REM latency.


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