Most of of with Sleep Apnea or other Sleep Disorders believe the correct diagnostic tools are in the preliminary stages. We all await the day when we can receive a precise diagnosis of the correct machine and pressure needed to complete improved therapy. Jan
New Way To Analyze Sleep Disorders
ScienceDaily (Apr. 18, 2009) — Sleep is such an essential part of human existence that we spend about a third of our lives doing it -- some more successfully than others. Sleep disorders afflict some 50-70 million people in the United States and are a major cause of disease and injury. People who suffer from disturbed sleep have an increased risk of heart attack, stroke, hypertension, obesity, depression, and accidents. Nearly a fifth of all serious car crashes, in fact, are linked to sleeplessness.
Diagnosing sleep disorders is not necessarily easy. In standard "sleep studies," people spend one or more nights at hospitals or other inpatient centers, sleeping while sensors and electrodes attached to the head and torso record breathing, brain waves, heart rate, and other vital signs.
Now, a group of scientists in Israel and Germany has discovered a simple new way to monitor sleep and potentially diagnose sleep disorders just by recording someone's heart rate. Their method relies on using a mathematical technique to analyze these recordings and tease out information related to the synchronization between heartbeat and breathing, which might be a measure of fitness of the cardio-respiratory system.
Their work may one day help clinicians more easily diagnose sleep disorders and determine optimal treatments for people with congestive heart failure. Athletes might also be able analyze their own recordings to optimize workouts.
Conducted by researchers at Technische Universität Ilmenau in Germany, Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, Israel, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg in Germany, and Schlafmedizinisches Zentrum der Charité Berlin, the work appears in a special focus issue of the journal Chaos, which is published by the American Institute of Physics (AIP). The special issue is focused on nonlinear dynamics in cognitive and neural systems. It asks how chaos affects certain brain areas and presents interdisciplinary approaches to various problems in neuroscience -- including sleep disorders.
Monitoring the heartbeat provides information about breathing because the two physiological processes are weakly coupled. During inhalation, the heart beats faster. During exhalation, the heart slows down. These effects are seen during sleep as well. Moreover, the heart rate and breathing rate also change across certain stages of sleep. They are faster and fluctuate more during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep than they do during deep sleep, for instance.
In their new study, the Israeli and German scientists showed that the synchronization between the heartbeat and breathing pattern is significantly enhanced during certain stages of sleep. By mathematically analyzing someone's heart rate throughout the night, they could gain information on that person's breathing and sleep stage.
They looked at data from the European project SIESTA, which keeps a database of sleep data recorded in seven countries from 295 people -- about half of whom have sleep disorders. Subjects of this study spent two nights in sleep laboratories, slumbering while electrodes connected to their heads and torsos monitored things like brain and muscle activity, heart rate, and eye movement. This collection of physiological data is what normally enables doctors to reconstruct the phases of sleep and diagnose sleep disorders.
The Israeli and German scientists analyzed just the heart data for the 150 people in the SIESTA study who have no known sleep disorders. They then used the heartbeats to reconstruct the breathing patterns, and they showed that these reconstructions accurately reflect the actual recorded breathing data collected in sleep labs. Moreover, looking at the synchronization between heartbeat and breathing, the group could show that there is a significant relationship between sleep stages and cardio-respiratory synchronization patterns, i.e., heartbeat and breathing mostly synchronize during non-REM sleep (light and deep sleep), and cardio-respiratory synchronization is almost absent during REM sleep.
Next they plan to extend their study to people with sleep disorders to determine whether their technique can accurately diagnose these disorders. Analyzing the heartbeat using their technique may also reveal information about cardiorespiratory capacity, which may lead to diagnostic markers of cardiac diseases and ways to determine optimal treatments for people with congestive heart failure. Monitoring cardiorespiratory capacity may also help atheletes optimize workout routines
New Way to Analyze Sleep Disorders
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New Way to Analyze Sleep Disorders
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Re: New Way to Analyze Sleep Disorders
Maybe a big improvement over the standard sleep study for apnea.
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Re: New Way to Analyze Sleep Disorders
Hi Riv,
Perhaps treatment could be given as simply as supplemental oxygen is now.
Let's not go "Back to the Future" but "Forward with improved Treatment"
Jan
You are absolutely right. Can you imagine how successful apnea sleep therapy would be, if all the sleep disorders could be diagnosed with an initial test - followed by definitive treatment.Riv wrote:Maybe a big improvement over the standard sleep study for apnea.
Perhaps treatment could be given as simply as supplemental oxygen is now.
Let's not go "Back to the Future" but "Forward with improved Treatment"
Jan
_________________
Mask: Mirage Quattro™ Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: Began CPAP 1-16-2009, Pressure=10 cm, Mask, CMS 50Plus Oximeter |
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- Posts: 776
- Joined: Sat Jan 17, 2009 8:49 pm
- Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Re: New Way to Analyze Sleep Disorders
Riv
I'm with you
The manufactures have improved machines somewhat - but are these changes in accord with what could be accomplished if they poured more of their profits back into research? Perhaps they do spent an appropiate amount of R&D.
Does Sleep Apnea research receive government funding? Are Medical Colleges getting Grant Funds if they are working on solutions to Sleep Apnea? . I know USA is in a Budget crunch - but we still should be writing our Representatives in Congress asking/demanding more funds to resolve what is becoming a national problem. Jan
I'm with you
As Obama says if we can put a man on the moon, . . in effect, we can do anything. Well, we put a man on the moon long ago, Medicine has advanced lights years since then. but I view Sleep Apnea treatment in the "Horse & Buggy Stage"SaltLakeJan wrote:Riv wrote:
Maybe a big improvement over the standard sleep study for apnea.
The manufactures have improved machines somewhat - but are these changes in accord with what could be accomplished if they poured more of their profits back into research? Perhaps they do spent an appropiate amount of R&D.
Does Sleep Apnea research receive government funding? Are Medical Colleges getting Grant Funds if they are working on solutions to Sleep Apnea? . I know USA is in a Budget crunch - but we still should be writing our Representatives in Congress asking/demanding more funds to resolve what is becoming a national problem. Jan
_________________
Mask: Mirage Quattro™ Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: Began CPAP 1-16-2009, Pressure=10 cm, Mask, CMS 50Plus Oximeter |