• Sleep Breath · Jun 2019

    Sleep quality in survivors of critical illness.

    • Ch Alexopoulou, M Bolaki, E Akoumianaki, S Erimaki, E Kondili, P Mitsias, and D Georgopoulos.
    • Intensive Care Medicine Department, University Hospital of Heraklion, Medical School, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece.
    • Sleep Breath. 2019 Jun 1; 23 (2): 463-471.

    PurposeThere is limited data regarding the sleep quality in survivors of critical illness, while the time course of the sleep abnormalities observed after ICU discharge is not known. The aim of this study was to assess sleep quality and the time course of sleep abnormalities in survivors of critical illness.MethodsEligible survivors of critical illness without hypercapnia and hypoxemia were evaluated within 10 days (1st evaluation, n = 36) and at 6 months after hospital discharge (2nd evaluation, n = 29). At each visit, all patients underwent an overnight full polysomnography and completed health-related quality of life questionnaires (HRQL). Lung function and electro-diagnostic tests (ED) were performed in 24 and 11 patients, respectively.ResultsAt 1st evaluation, sleep quality and HRQL were poor. Sleep was characterised by high percentages of N1, low of N3 and REM stages, and high apnea-hypopnea index (AHI, events/h). Twenty-two out of 36 patients (61%) exhibited AHI ≥ 15 (21 obstructive, 1 central). None of the patients' characteristics, including HRQL and lung function, predicted the occurrence of AHI ≥ 15. At 6 months, although sleep quality remained poor (high percentages of N1 and low of REM), sleep architecture had improved as indicated by the significant increase in N3 [4.2% (0-12.5) vs. 9.8% (3.0-20.4)] and decrease in AHI [21.5 (6.5-29.4) vs. 12.8 (4.7-20.4)]. HRQL improved slightly but significantly at 6 months. Neither the changes in HRQL nor in lung function tests were related to these of sleep architecture. Six out of eight patients with abnormal ED at 1st evaluation continued to exhibit abnormal results at 6 months.ConclusionsSurvivors of critical illness exhibited a high prevalence of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing and poor sleep architecture at hospital discharge, which slightly improved 6 months later, indicating that reversible factors are partly responsible for these abnormalities.

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