1 Yale University School of Medicine, and.
2 Section of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2017 Sep;14(9):1457-1468. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201702-148SR.
Sleep disturbance during intensive care unit (ICU) admission is common and severe. Sleep disturbance has been observed in survivors of critical illness even after transfer out of the ICU. Not only is sleep important to overall health and well being, but patients after critical illness are also in a physiologically vulnerable state. Understanding how sleep disturbance impacts recovery from critical illness after hospital discharge is therefore clinically meaningful.
This Systematic Review aimed to summarize studies that identify the prevalence of and risk factors for sleep disturbance after hospital discharge for critical illness survivors.
PubMed (January 4, 2017), MEDLINE (January 4, 2017), and EMBASE (February 1, 2017).
Databases were searched for studies of critically ill adult patients after hospital discharge, with sleep disturbance measured as a primary outcome by standardized questionnaire or objective measurement tools. From each relevant study, we extracted prevalence and severity of sleep disturbance at each time point, objective sleep parameters (such as total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and arousal index), and risk factors for sleep disturbance.
A total of 22 studies were identified, with assessment tools including subjective questionnaires, polysomnography, and actigraphy. Subjective questionnaire studies reveal a 50-66.7% (within 1 mo), 34-64.3% (>1-3 mo), 22-57% (>3-6 mo), and 10-61% (>6 mo) prevalence of abnormal sleep after hospital discharge after critical illness. Of the studies assessing multiple time points, four of five questionnaire studies and five of five polysomnography studies show improved aspects of sleep over time. Risk factors for poor sleep varied, but prehospital factors (chronic comorbidity, pre-existing sleep abnormality) and in-hospital factors (severity of acute illness, in-hospital sleep disturbance, pain medication use, and ICU acute stress symptoms) may play a role. Sleep disturbance was frequently associated with postdischarge psychological comorbidities and impaired quality of life.
Sleep disturbance is common in critically ill patients up to 12 months after hospital discharge. Both subjective and objective studies, however, suggest that sleep disturbance improves over time. More research is needed to understand and optimize sleep in recovery from critical illness.
入住重症监护病房(ICU)期间的睡眠障碍很常见且较为严重。即使在离开 ICU 后,危重病幸存者也会出现睡眠障碍。睡眠不仅对整体健康和幸福感很重要,而且患有危重病的患者还处于生理脆弱状态。因此,了解睡眠障碍如何影响出院后从危重病中恢复具有重要的临床意义。
本系统评价旨在总结识别危重病幸存者出院后睡眠障碍的发生率和危险因素的研究。
PubMed(2017 年 1 月 4 日)、MEDLINE(2017 年 1 月 4 日)和 EMBASE(2017 年 2 月 1 日)。
对出院后危重病成年患者的研究进行数据库检索,以标准化问卷或客观测量工具测量的睡眠障碍为主要结局。从每项相关研究中,我们提取了每个时间点睡眠障碍的发生率和严重程度、客观睡眠参数(如总睡眠时间、睡眠效率和觉醒指数)以及睡眠障碍的危险因素。
共确定了 22 项研究,评估工具包括主观问卷、多导睡眠图和活动记录仪。主观问卷研究显示,出院后 1 个月内(50-66.7%)、1-3 个月(34-64.3%)、3-6 个月(22-57%)和 6 个月以上(10-61%)存在异常睡眠。在评估多个时间点的研究中,五项问卷研究中的四项和五项多导睡眠图研究中的五项显示,随着时间的推移,睡眠的各个方面都有所改善。睡眠不良的危险因素各不相同,但医院前因素(慢性合并症、预先存在的睡眠异常)和医院内因素(急性疾病严重程度、医院内睡眠障碍、疼痛药物使用和 ICU 急性应激症状)可能发挥作用。睡眠障碍与出院后心理合并症和生活质量受损经常相关。
危重病患者出院后 12 个月内睡眠障碍很常见。然而,主观和客观研究均表明,随着时间的推移,睡眠障碍会得到改善。需要进一步研究以了解和优化危重病康复过程中的睡眠。