Polysomnographic and actigraphic evidence of sleep fragmentation in patients with irritable bowel syndrome

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Abstract

Study Objective: To characterize the function and quality of sleep in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Design: A prospective study with a historic comparison group. Setting: A regional hospital that also serves as a tertiary referral center. Patients: Eighteen patients with IBS and a comparison group of 20 matched adults with mild benign snoring. Interventions: A polysomnography study and a wrist actigraphy study. Measurements: All subjects underwent sleep studies and completed self-report questionnaires (IBS severity, psychosocial variables, sleep function, and Epworth Sleepiness Scale). Fourteen IBS and 11 comparison patients underwent actigraphy. Results: The IBS patients had more than 70% less slow-wave stage sleep (4.5±7.3% vs 19.3±12.9%; P=0.006), compensated by increased stage 2 sleep (72.2±6.6% vs 60.1±16.8%; P=0.01). The IBS group had significant sleep fragmentation with a significantly higher arousal and awakening index (P<0.001), a longer wake period after sleep onset (P=0.02), and more downward shifts to lighter sleep stages (P=0.01). The 4-night actigraphy study supported the polysomnography findings. The sleep fragmentation index was significantly higher (P=0.008) in the IBS group. The IBS patients reported greater daytime sleepiness (9.0±4.8 vs 6.4±4.8, Epworth Sleepiness Scale score, P<0.01) and greater impairment in quality of life, which correlated significantly with the sleep fragmentation indexes. The difference between the groups was not due to differences in baseline anxiety/depression levels. Conclusions: Patients with IBS have impaired sleep quality, reduced slow-wave sleep activity, and significant sleep fragmentation. The cause-and-effect relationship of these findings with patients' daytime symptoms should be studied further.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Rotem, A. Y., Sperber, A. D., Krugliak, P., Freidman, B., Tal, A., & Tarasiuk, A. (2003). Polysomnographic and actigraphic evidence of sleep fragmentation in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. Sleep, 26(6), 747–752. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/26.6.747

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