Faculty of Medicine, CLAEH University, Punta del Este, Uruguay.
Pediatric Sleep Center, Division De Pediatria, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
J Clin Sleep Med. 2021 May 1;17(5):1133-1139. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.9152.
Sleep medicine is a relatively young field with exponential growth in development and research in the last decades. Parallel to the advances in the United States, Latin America also had its beginnings in sleep medicine housed in neuroscience laboratories. Since the very first Latin American meeting in 1985, and the first sleep society in 1993, sleep research has undergone significant development in subsequent years. From contributions in animal research that allowed understanding of the activity of the brain during sleep to the studies that improved our knowledge of sleep disorders in humans, Latin America has become a scientific hub for expansion of sleep research. In this article, we present a historical account of the development of sleep medicine in Latin America, the current state of education and the achievements in research throughout history, and the latest advances in the trending areas of sleep science and medicine. These findings were presented during World Sleep Society meeting in Vancouver in 2019 and complement the work on sleep societies and training published by Vizcarra-Escobar et al in their article "Sleep societies and sleep training programs in Latin America" (J Clin Sleep Med. 2020;16(6):983-988).
睡眠医学是一个相对年轻的领域,在过去几十年中发展和研究呈指数级增长。与美国的进展并行,拉丁美洲的睡眠医学也始于神经科学实验室。自 1985 年第一次拉丁美洲会议和 1993 年第一个睡眠学会成立以来,睡眠研究在随后的几年中经历了重大发展。从有助于了解睡眠期间大脑活动的动物研究贡献,到提高我们对人类睡眠障碍认识的研究,拉丁美洲已成为睡眠研究扩展的科学中心。在本文中,我们介绍了拉丁美洲睡眠医学发展的历史、教育现状以及历史上的研究成果,以及睡眠科学和医学的热门领域的最新进展。这些发现是在 2019 年温哥华世界睡眠学会会议上提出的,并补充了 Vizcarra-Escobar 等人在他们的文章“拉丁美洲的睡眠学会和睡眠培训计划”(J Clin Sleep Med. 2020;16(6):983-988)中发表的关于睡眠学会和培训的工作。