Sleep–wake disorders persist 18 months after traumatic brain injury but remain underrecognized
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Abstract
Objective: This study is a prospective, controlled clinical and electrophysiologic trial examining the chronic course of posttraumatic sleep–wake disturbances (SWD).
Methods: We screened 140 patients with acute, first-ever traumatic brain injury of any severity and included 60 patients for prospective follow-up examinations. Patients with prior brain trauma, other neurologic or systemic disease, drug abuse, or psychiatric comorbidities were excluded. Eighteen months after trauma, we performed detailed sleep assessment in 31 participants. As a control group, we enrolled healthy individuals without prior brain trauma matched for age, sex, and sleep satiation.
Results: In the chronic state after traumatic brain injury, sleep need per 24 hours was persistently increased in trauma patients (8.1 ± 0.5 hours) as compared to healthy controls (7.1 ± 0.7 hours). The prevalence of chronic objective excessive daytime sleepiness was 67% in patients with brain trauma compared to 19% in controls. Patients significantly underestimated excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep need, emphasizing the unreliability of self-assessments on SWD in trauma patients.
Conclusions: This study provides prospective, controlled, and objective evidence for chronic persistence of posttraumatic SWD, which remain underestimated by patients. These results have clinical and medicolegal implications given that SWD can exacerbate other outcomes of traumatic brain injury, impair quality of life, and are associated with public safety hazards.
GLOSSARY
- EDS=
- excessive daytime sleepiness;
- ICH=
- intracranial hemorrhage;
- SWD=
- sleep–wake disturbances;
- TBI=
- traumatic brain injury
Footnotes
↵* These authors contributed equally to this work.
Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
Editorial, page 1934
- Received September 22, 2015.
- Accepted in final form February 1, 2016.
- © 2016 American Academy of Neurology
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Sleep-wake disorders in TBI and the role of mental fatigue
- Joukje van der Naalt, Neurologist, Department of Neurology, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen the Netherlandj.van.der.naalt@umcg.nl
- Bram Jacobs
Submitted June 08, 2016 - Head injury and its impact on sleep hygiene: An entity slowly coming out of the shell
- Sunil Munakomi, MCh Resident, Kathmandu University, Nepalsunilmunakomi@gmail.com
Submitted May 13, 2016
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