Assessment of Sleep in Ventilator-Supported Critically III Patients

被引:53
作者
Ambrogio, Cristina [1 ,2 ]
Koebnick, Jeffrey [1 ,2 ]
Quan, Stuart F. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Ranieri, V. Marco [4 ]
Parthasarathy, Sairam [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] So Arizona Vet Adm Hlth Care Syst, Sect Pulm Crit Care & Sleep Med, Tucson, AZ 85723 USA
[2] Univ Arizona, Arizona Resp Ctr, Dept Med, Tucson, AZ USA
[3] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Div Sleep, Boston, MA USA
[4] Univ Turin, Dept Anesthesiol & Crit Care, Turin, Italy
关键词
Critical illness; polysomnography; physiologic monitoring; artificial respiration; reproducibility of results;
D O I
10.1093/sleep/31.11.1559
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: In critically ill patients, sleep derangements are reported to be severe using Rechtschaffen and Kales (R&K) methodology; however, whether such methodology can reliably assess sleep during critical illness is unknown. We set out to determine the reproducibility of 4 different sleep-assessment methods (3 manual and 1 computer-based) for ventilator-supported critically ill patients and also to quantify the extent to which the reproducibility of the manual methods for measuring sleep differed between critically ill and ambulatory (control) patients. Design: Observational methodologic study. Setting: Academic center. Patients: Critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation and age-matched controls underwent polysomnography. Interventions: None. Measurements and Results: Reproducibility for the computer-based method (spectral analysis of electroencephalography [EEG]) was better than that for the manual methods: R&K methodology and sleep-wakefulness organization pattern (P = 0.03). In critically ill patients, the proportion of misclassifications for measurements using spectral analysis, sleep-wakefulness organization pattern, and R&K methodology were 0%, 36%, and 53%, respectively (P < 0.0001). The EEG pattern of burst suppression was not observed. Interobserver and intraobserver reliability of the manual sleep-assessment methods for critically ill patients (kappa = 0.52 +/- 0.23) was worse than that for control patients (kappa = 0.89 +/- 0.13; P = 0.03). In critically ill patients, the overall reliability of the R&K methodology was relatively low for assessing sleep (kappa = 0.19), but detection of rapid eye movement sleep revealed good agreement (kappa = 0.70). Conclusions: Reproducibility for spectral analysis of EEG was better than that for the manual methods: R&K methodology and sleep-wakefulness organization pattern, For assessment of sleep in critically ill patients, the use of spectral analysis, sleep-wakefulness organization state, or rapid eye movement sleep alone may be preferred over the R&K methodology.
引用
收藏
页码:1559 / 1568
页数:10
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