Graduate Institute of Nursing, College of Nursing, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Department of Neurosurgery, Taipei Medical University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan; School of Medicine, College of Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2014 Jun;51(6):892-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.10.020. Epub 2013 Oct 28.
Disturbed sleep pattern is a common symptom after head trauma and its prevalence in acute traumatic brain injury (TBI) is less discussed. Sleep has a profound impact on cognitive function recovery and the mediating effect of disturbed sleep on cognitive function recovery has not been examined after acute TBI.
To identify the prevalence of disturbed sleep in mild, moderate, and severe acute TBI patients, and to determine the mediating effects of sleep on the relationship between brain injury severity and the recovery of cognitive function.
A prospective study design.
Neurosurgical wards in a medical center in northern Taiwan.
Fifty-two acute TBI patients between the ages of 18 and 65 years who had received a diagnosis of TBI for the first time, and were admitted to the neurosurgical ward.
The severity of brain injury was initially determined using the Glasgow Coma Scale. Each patient wore an actigraphy instrument on a non-paralytic or non-dominated limb for 7 consecutive days. A 7-day sleep diary was used to facilitate data analysis. Cognitive function was assessed on the first and seventh day after admission based on the Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Functioning.
The mild (n=35), moderate (n=7) and severe (n=10) TBI patients exhibited poorer sleep efficiency, and longer total sleep time (TST) and waking time after sleep onset, compared with the normative values for the sleep-related variables (P<.05 for all). The severe and moderate TBI patients had longer daytime TST than the mild TBI patients (P<.001), and the severe TBI patients had longer 24-h TST than the mild TBI patients (P=.001). The relationship between the severity of brain injury and the recovery of cognition function was mediated by daytime TST (t=-2.65, P=.004).
Poor sleep efficiency, prolonged periods of daytime sleep, and a high prevalence of hypersomnia are common symptoms in acute TBI patients. The duration of daytime sleep mediates the relationship between the severity of brain injury and the recovery of cognition function.
睡眠模式紊乱是颅脑外伤后的常见症状,但其在急性创伤性脑损伤(TBI)中的发生率较少被讨论。睡眠对认知功能恢复有深远的影响,而在急性 TBI 后,睡眠紊乱对认知功能恢复的中介作用尚未被检验。
确定轻度、中度和重度急性 TBI 患者中睡眠紊乱的发生率,并确定睡眠对脑损伤严重程度与认知功能恢复之间关系的中介作用。
前瞻性研究设计。
中国台湾北部一家医学中心的神经外科病房。
52 名年龄在 18 岁至 65 岁之间的急性 TBI 患者,他们首次被诊断为 TBI,并被收入神经外科病房。
最初使用格拉斯哥昏迷量表确定脑损伤的严重程度。每位患者在非瘫痪或非优势肢体上佩戴活动记录仪 7 天。使用 7 天睡眠日记来促进数据分析。根据 Rancho Los Amigos 认知功能水平,在入院后的第 1 天和第 7 天评估认知功能。
轻度(n=35)、中度(n=7)和重度(n=10)TBI 患者的睡眠效率较差,总睡眠时间(TST)和入睡后总觉醒时间较长,与睡眠相关变量的正常值相比(所有 P<.05)。重度和中度 TBI 患者的日间 TST 长于轻度 TBI 患者(P<.001),重度 TBI 患者的 24 h TST 长于轻度 TBI 患者(P=.001)。脑损伤严重程度与认知功能恢复之间的关系受日间 TST 影响(t=-2.65,P=.004)。
睡眠效率差、白天睡眠时间延长以及嗜睡发生率高是急性 TBI 患者的常见症状。日间睡眠时间的长短中介了脑损伤严重程度与认知功能恢复之间的关系。