2009
DOI: 10.1007/s00408-009-9189-8
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Can We Improve Sleep Quality by Changing the Way We Ventilate Patients?

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In addition to causing pain and anxiety, MV is believed to disrupt sleep via patient-ventilator asynchrony, overventilation leading to apneas Sleep Loss and Circadian Rhythm Disruption and subsequent arousals, and inadequate ventilatory support leading to increased respiratory effort and subsequent arousals. 78 Although extensively studied, there is no strong evidence to support improved patient sleep with one ventilator mode over another. 79 A PSG study of 11 patients comparing assist control (AC) and pressure support ventilation (PSV) demonstrated less sleep fragmentation during PSV; this difference was attributed to diminished patient control of PCO 2 in the AC mode.…”
Section: Medical Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to causing pain and anxiety, MV is believed to disrupt sleep via patient-ventilator asynchrony, overventilation leading to apneas Sleep Loss and Circadian Rhythm Disruption and subsequent arousals, and inadequate ventilatory support leading to increased respiratory effort and subsequent arousals. 78 Although extensively studied, there is no strong evidence to support improved patient sleep with one ventilator mode over another. 79 A PSG study of 11 patients comparing assist control (AC) and pressure support ventilation (PSV) demonstrated less sleep fragmentation during PSV; this difference was attributed to diminished patient control of PCO 2 in the AC mode.…”
Section: Medical Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These sources include alarms from monitoring devices infusion pumps, ventilators and normal function of the ventilator, telephones, beepers, overhead paging and health care providers having conversations at patients' bedsides [7][8][9]12,[15][16].…”
Section: Environmental Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Light: Exposure to artificial light in the ICU 24 h a day can lead to altered sleep patterns [1,8,9,11,12,[15][16][17]. Exposure to artificial light is reported to stifle secretion of melatonin, which controls circadian rhythms.…”
Section: Environmental Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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