The authors examined 28 dementia inpatients receiving treatment as usual. Beginning-to-end differences in neuropsychiatric symptoms and actigraphic sleep patterns were measured. Using a mixed-model, the authors regressed neuropsychiatric symptoms on average sleep minutes (between-subjects effect) and each night’s deviation from average (within-subject effect). Sleep did not significantly differ from beginning to end of participation, whereas neuropsychiatric symptoms did. Average sleep minutes predicted average neuropsychiatric symptoms (p=0.002), but each night’s deviation from the average did not predict next day’s symptoms (p=0.90). These findings raise questions about the immediate benefits of treating sleep-wake disturbances on neuropsychiatric symptoms in hospitalized inpatients with dementias.
CITATION STYLE
Tanev, K. S., Winokur, A., & Pitman, R. K. (2017). Sleep patterns and neuropsychiatric symptoms in hospitalized patients with dementia. Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 29(3), 248–253. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.neuropsych.16090166
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