1994
DOI: 10.1016/0006-3223(94)91170-3
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Sleep and motor activity of community elderly who frequently use bedtime medications

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Pollak et al studied a small group of community-dwelling elderly people who frequently used bedtime medications (including benzodiazepines, minor analgesics, antihistamines and antidepressants) and compared them to elderly controls who did not have sleeping difficulty and did not use hypnotics (evidence level 4C-b). 138 Although there were no differences between groups when the 24-hour period was considered as a whole, post-hoc comparisons in the early morning hours indicated that subjects using bedtime medications became active, as measured by actigraphy, about 1.5 hours earlier in the morning than controls.…”
Section: Actigraphy In Sleep Intervention Trials and Comparative Studmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Pollak et al studied a small group of community-dwelling elderly people who frequently used bedtime medications (including benzodiazepines, minor analgesics, antihistamines and antidepressants) and compared them to elderly controls who did not have sleeping difficulty and did not use hypnotics (evidence level 4C-b). 138 Although there were no differences between groups when the 24-hour period was considered as a whole, post-hoc comparisons in the early morning hours indicated that subjects using bedtime medications became active, as measured by actigraphy, about 1.5 hours earlier in the morning than controls.…”
Section: Actigraphy In Sleep Intervention Trials and Comparative Studmentioning
confidence: 85%