Comparison of actigraphic, polysomnographic, and subjective assessment of sleep parameters in sleep-disordered patients
Objective: Comparison of polysomnography (PSG)-derived sleep parameters (total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and number of awakenings) to those derived from actigraphy and subjective questionnaires. Background: Actigraphy is commonly used to assist sleep specialists in the diagnosis of various sleep...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sleep medicine 2001-09, Vol.2 (5), p.389-396 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective: Comparison of polysomnography (PSG)-derived sleep parameters (total sleep time, sleep efficiency, and number of awakenings) to those derived from actigraphy and subjective questionnaires.
Background: Actigraphy is commonly used to assist sleep specialists in the diagnosis of various sleep and circadian-rhythm disorders. However, few validation studies incorporate large sample sizes, typical sleep clinic patients, or comparisons with subjective reports of sleep parameters.
Methods: Clinical series with 100 consecutive sleep-disordered patients (69 men, 31 women, mean age of 49±14.7 years) at a tertiary sleep disorders center. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy measures were obtained from epoch-by-epoch comparison of PSG and actigraphic data. Subjective sleep parameter data were derived from questionnaires given to subjects in the morning following their recording night.
Results: We found that total sleep time and sleep efficiency did not significantly differ between PSG data and the combined data obtained from actigraphy and subjective reports. Using a high-threshold (low-wake-sensitivity) actigraphic algorithm, the number of awakenings was not significantly different from those detected by PSG.
Conclusions: We recommend the use of subjective data as an adjunct to actigraphic data in estimating total sleep time and sleep efficiency in sleep-disordered patients, especially those with disorders of excessive somnolence. |
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ISSN: | 1389-9457 1878-5506 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S1389-9457(00)00098-8 |