AI Article Synopsis

  • The study introduces Odds-Ratio-Product (ORP) as a new way to measure sleep depth, revealing insights that traditional sleep metrics miss, such as diagnosing sleep disorders.
  • It analyzes data from two studies, measuring various epochs of sleep and how they relate to sleep disorders, quality of life, and sleepiness levels among different demographics.
  • The findings suggest that certain ORP patterns are linked to conditions like obstructive sleep apnea and insomnia, indicating unique phenotypes of insomnia that could enhance understanding and treatment of sleep-related issues.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Conventional metrics of sleep quantity/depth have serious shortcomings. Odds-Ratio-Product (ORP) is a continuous metric of sleep depth ranging from 0 (very deep sleep) to 2.5 (full-wakefulness). We describe an ORP-based approach that provides information on sleep disorders not apparent from traditional metrics.

Methods: We analyzed records from the Sleep-Heart-Health-Study and a study of performance deficit following sleep deprivation. ORP of all 30-second epochs in each PSG and percent of epochs in each decile of ORPs range were calculated. Percentage of epochs in deep sleep (ORP < 0.50) and in full-wakefulness (ORP > 2.25) were each assigned a rank, 1-3, representing first and second digits, respectively, of nine distinct types ("1,1", "1,2" … "3,3"). Prevalence of each type in clinical groups and their associations with demographics, sleepiness (Epworth-Sleepiness-Scale, ESS) and quality of life (QOL; Short-Form-Health-Survey-36) were determined.

Results: Three types ("1,1", "1,2", "1,3") were prevalent in OSA and were associated with reduced QOL. Two ("1,3" and "2,3") were prevalent in insomnia with short-sleep-duration (insomnia-SSD), but only "1,3" was associated with poor sleep depth and reduced QOL, suggesting two phenotypes in insomnia-SSD. ESS was high in types "1,1" and "1,2", and low in "1,3" and "2,3". Prevalence of some types increased with age while in others it decreased. Other types were either rare ("1,1" and "3,3") or high ("2,2") at all ages.

Conclusions: The proposed ORP histogram offers specific and unique information on the underlying neurophysiological characteristics of sleep disorders not captured by routine metrics, with potential of advancing diagnosis and management of these disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9195236PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsac059DOI Listing

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