Impact of sleep disturbances on outcomes in intensive care
units
Critical Care volume 28,
Article number: 331, Published: 09 October 2024
Background
Sleep deprivation is common in intensive care units (ICUs)
and may alter respiratory performance. Few studies have assessed the role of
sleep disturbances on outcomes in critically ill patients.
Objectives
We hypothesized that sleep disturbances may be associated
with poor outcomes in ICUs.
Methods
Post-hoc analysis pooling three observational studies
assessing sleep by complete polysomnography in 131 conscious and non-sedated
patients included at different times of their ICU stay. Sleep was assessed
early in a group of patients admitted for acute respiratory failure while
breathing spontaneously (n = 34), or under mechanical
ventilation in patients with weaning difficulties (n = 45),
or immediately after extubation (n = 52). Patients admitted for acute
respiratory failure who required intubation, those under mechanical ventilation
who had prolonged weaning, and those who required reintubation after extubation
were considered as having poor clinical outcomes. Durations of deep sleep,
rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and atypical sleep were compared according to
the timing of polysomnography and the clinical outcomes.
Results
Whereas deep sleep remained preserved in patients admitted
for acute respiratory failure, it was markedly reduced under mechanical
ventilation and after extubation (p < 0.01). Atypical sleep was
significantly more frequent in patients under mechanical ventilation than in
those breathing spontaneously (p < 0.01). REM sleep was uncommon at
any time of their ICU stay. Patients with complete disappearance of REM sleep
(50% of patients) were more likely to have poor clinical outcomes than those
with persistent REM sleep (24% vs. 9%, p = 0.03).
Conclusion
Complete disappearance of REM sleep was significantly
associated with poor clinical outcomes in critically ill patients.
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