Older adults with moderate sleep complaints can improve self-rated sleep quality through a 6-month, low- to moderate-intensity tai chi program. Tai chi appears to be effective as a nonpharmacological approach to sleep enhancement for sleep-disturbed elderly individuals.
Disruptive nocturnal behavior, often referred to as sundowning, is a commonly encountered clinical problem in most forms of dementia. This study compared disruptive nocturnal behavior in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD). Questionnaire data were collected from 60 AD and 48 PD caregivers. Respondents were asked to record the typical time of day when any of seven disruptive behaviors were evidenced in their patients, if at all. Two scores were computed: (1) a sundowning score (number of nocturnal disruptive behaviors, range 0-7), and (2) a total score (number of disruptive behaviors without regard to time, range 0-7). Results indicated PD patients were more likely than AD patients to exhibit disruptive nocturnal behavior. The dose, timing, or number of years on antiparkinsonian medication were not related to nocturnal disruptive behavior within the PD patient group. These findings raise the possibility that sundowning in PD patients may be a manifestation of dopaminergic depletion within the basal ganglia or other abnormalities involving the cholinergic, serotoninergic and/or noradrenergic systems in the brainstem.
We report a 38-year-old man with obstructive sleep apnea whose sleep-disordered breathing was substantially reduced by sleep in the supine, "knees-up" position, relative to his sleep in the customary supine, "knees-down" position. No obvious anatomic or pathophysiologic alterations explained this phenomenon. The effect was reproducible in the patient 4 years later. Potential mechanisms underlying such improvement, including alterations in upper airway/lung volume dependence and venous supply to upper airway vasculature, are discussed. This manipulation could be an important adjunctive treatment for a subset of obstructive sleep apnea patients demonstrating such an effect.
Abstract:Recently described functional connections between basal ganglia and brainstem circuits provide a neurobiologic basis for the absence of REM sleep atonia in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, identifying atypical REM sleep in PD may be problematic. Reliable sleep staging has never been demonstrated in such patients. In this study, 3 experienced scorers independently evaluated overnight polysomnograms from 10 (PD) patients. Results indicated good agreement for distinguishing REM from NREM sleep and waking. Reliable differentiation among NREM stages was more difficult to achieve. The results suggest that, despite suspension of REM sleep atonia accompanying PD, trained scorers can distinguish REM from wakefulness and NREM sleep.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.