Wednesday, March 29, 2017

CPAP may improve PTSD in Veterans with sleep apnea

This article discusses research about post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). There have been research studies linking PTSD and OSA, possibly because of OSA-related sleep disruption. In particular, OSA can be more frequent in dream sleep, resulting in more dream sleep fragmentation. This could cause more nightmares, or at possibly more awareness of nightmares. In this study, the authors sought to determine if CPAP therapy for OSA also reduced PTSD severity in US Veterans.

The results showed a modest reduction in PTSD symptoms in patients with OSA treated with CPAP for 6 months. And the more nights someone used their CPAP, the less severe the PTSD symptoms. There were also improvements in sleep quality, daytime functioning, and quality of life.

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Wearable sleep-tracking devices and apps

This article points out a trend I've seen in my practice with some of my patients. Patient, typically with insomnia, describe their sleep quality based on what their FitBit watch tells them, rather than on their own perception of their sleep quality. The problem with these wearable sleep-tracking devices is that they are not very accurate at measuring sleep - they only record movements. Those movements could be from the patient, their bedpartner, or a pet in the bed.

The article highlights 3 separate patients who put more trust in their sleep-tracking device rather than on more accurate diagnostic tools (like sleep studies) and the sleep therapist who was using validated treatments like cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). The study authors are concerned that these sleep-tracking devices are interfering with CBT-I, reinforcing sleep-related anxiety or perfectionism for some patients. For example, they explained how all three patients were spending excessive time in bed in an attempt to increase sleep duration as measured by their sleep-tracking device. But spending excess time in bed is one of the behaviors that worsens insomnia.

The authors explained what they tell their patients about the sleep tracking devices - that the trackers measure movement and not brainwaves. Therefore, these devices cannot determine light from deep sleep. They explain that the best use of these devices is probably to monitor their sleep patterns, including how much time they are spending in bed, rather than the number of minutes spent awake or asleep.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Living with children may mean less sleep for women

This article discusses research presented at a the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology - I didn't attend this meeting. The article surveyed men and women about sleep duration and level of daytime tiredness. Researchers looked at age, race, education, marital status, number of children in the household, income, body mass index, exercise, employment, and snoring as possible factors linked to sleep deprivation. Results showed that living with children was associated with more sleep deprivation in women, but not with men. Also living with children resulted in women feeling more tired in the daytime. One thing not stated was how old the children are in these households. I would imagine that sleep deprivation and daytime tiredness would increase with younger children.

Monday, March 6, 2017

Obstructive sleep apnea without obesity

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is more common in obese individuals. Less is known about OSA in non-obese persons. This study looked at characteristics of OSA in non-obese people and compared them to OSA in obese people. In the introduction, the authors mention that non-obese individuals make up at least 20% of the adult OSA population. The authors also discussed that one reason non-obese people may have OSA is due to a low respiratory arousal threshold. This means that non-obese people may wake up more easily when their breathing tube collapses. In the study, the authors used information from sleep studies to estimate respiratory arousal threshold. The results showed that 25% of their patients were non-obese. And a higher proportion of non-obese patients had a low respiratory arousal threshold. Also CPAP usage was less in non-obese patients than obese patients. The authors concluded that non-obese patients may respond less to conventional OSA therapies (like CPAP) and that research is needed to discover alternative ways of treating OSA in non-obese patients.