The use of hypnotic and sedative medication for sleep improvement is common and long-term use has been associated with an increased risk of adverse events and mortality. A proportion of patients might develop long-term use after initiating new persistent use following surgery. This retrospective cohort study aimed to determine the incidence of new persistent hypnotic/sedative use after surgical procedures and associated patient and procedural factors. Data on prescriptions for hypnotic and sedative medications used for sleep improvement were retrieved from the National Prescription Medicine Registry. Medication naivety was defined as not filling a prescription for hypnotics/sedatives from 365 days through 31 days preceding surgery, new use was defined as medication naivety followed by filling a prescription for hypnotic/sedative medication from 30 days before surgery through 14 days after surgery. New persistent hypnotic/sedative use was defined as new use followed by filling another hypnotic/sedative prescription from 15 days through 365 days after surgery. Of 55,414 patients included in the study, 43,297 were naive to hypnotic/sedative medications. Of those naive patients, 4.6% met the criteria for new peri-operative use, of whom 51.6% developed new persistent hypnotic/sedative use. Patient and procedural factors associated with increased risk of new persistent use were older age; female sex; the presence of malignant neoplasm; ischaemic heart disease; and having undergone either cardiac or thoracic surgery. The hazard of long-term mortality was higher for patients with new persistent use (1.39, 95%CI 1.22-1.59) compared with patients who remained naive. While a small ratio of surgical patients initiates the use of hypnotics/sedatives in the peri-operative period, a substantial proportion of these develop persistent use, which is associated with adverse outcomes. Over time, the proportion of patients using hypnotics/sedatives has declined, but the risk of persistent use within this group has remained stable.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anae.16041 | DOI Listing |
Anaesthesia
August 2023
Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Peri-operative Services, Landspitali - The National University Hospital of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland.
The use of hypnotic and sedative medication for sleep improvement is common and long-term use has been associated with an increased risk of adverse events and mortality. A proportion of patients might develop long-term use after initiating new persistent use following surgery. This retrospective cohort study aimed to determine the incidence of new persistent hypnotic/sedative use after surgical procedures and associated patient and procedural factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep
November 2013
Department of Psychiatry, and Institute of Behavioral Science in Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Study Objectives: The objective of this study was to examine the associations between the temporal and severity characteristics of sleep disturbance and subsequent depression in community-dwelling older adults.
Design: A prospective cohort study with assessment of sleep disturbance and depression at baseline and across 2 years of follow-up.
Setting: Three urban communities in the United States.
Sleep
February 1992
Department of Neurology, University of Parma, Italy.
In nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, electroencephalographic cyclic alternating patterns (CAPS) express the organized complexity of arousal-related phasic events. As a translation of sustained instability of the arousal level, CAPS increase under perturbation and decrease under sleep-promoting conditions. After adaptation to the sleep lab, 18 subjects (12 with persistent psychophysiological insomnia and 6 without sleep complaints), all aged 40-60 years, underwent a random sequence of two nonconsecutive nocturnal recordings, one under placebo and one under an imidazopyridine hypnotic agent (zolpidem).
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