AI Article Synopsis

  • This study focuses on how traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) impact sleep and cognitive recovery over time, suggesting that quality sleep during hospitalization may lead to better long-term cognitive outcomes.
  • Patients with TBIs exhibited poorer sleep quality compared to those with orthopedic injuries and healthy controls, with unique sleep characteristics like increased slow-wave sleep linked to better cognitive performance years later.
  • The research emphasizes the significance of sleep in the recovery process after a TBI, indicating that monitoring and improving sleep in hospitalized patients could be crucial for enhancing neurological recovery.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) cause persistent cerebral damage and cognitive deficits. Because sleep may be a critical factor for brain recovery, we characterized the sleep of patients with TBI from early hospitalization to years post-injury and explored the hypothesis that better sleep during hospitalization predicts more favorable long-term cognitive outcomes.

Methods: We tested patients with moderate-to-severe TBI in the hospitalized (n = 11) and chronic (n = 43) stages using full-night polysomnography, with 82% of the hospitalized group being retested years post-injury. Hospitalized patients with severe orthopedic and/or spinal cord injury (n = 14) and healthy participants (n = 36) were tested as controls for the hospitalized and chronic TBI groups, respectively. Groups had similar age and sex and were compared for sleep characteristics, including slow waves and spindles. For patients with TBI, associations between sleep during hospitalization and long-term memory and executive function were assessed.

Results: Hospitalized patients with TBI or orthopedic injuries had lower sleep efficiency, higher wake after sleep onset, and lower spindle density than the chronic TBI and healthy control groups, but only hospitalized patients with brain injury had an increased proportion of slow-wave sleep. During hospitalization for TBI, less fragmented sleep, more slow-wave sleep, and higher spindle density were associated to more favorable cognitive outcomes years post-injury, while injury severity markers were not associated with these outcomes.

Conclusion: These findings highlight the importance of sleep following TBI, as it could be a strong predictor of neurological recovery, either as a promoter or an early marker of cognitive outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9366647PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsac123DOI Listing

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