Sleep and Psychiatric Disorders in Persons With Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Author:

Mollayeva Tatyana,D’Souza Andrea,Mollayeva Shirin

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference75 articles.

1. •• Weber F, Dan Y. Circuit -based interrogation of sleep control. Nature. 2016;538(7623):51–9. This paper summarizes scientific evidence of the neural circuits controlling sleep derived from technical innovations that allow observation of neuronal activity from genetically defined cell types, tracing their synaptic inputs and outputs. Researchers concluded that in addition to circadian and homeostatic regulations, sleep is influenced by a variety of emotional and physiological parameters (i.e., stress, pain, and hunger and body temperature), where the interactions between sleep and these other processes may be mediated by common neurons shared between different control circuits.

2. Shiromani PJ, Peever JH. New neuroscience tools that are identifying the sleep-wake circuit. Sleep. 2017; doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsx032 .

3. Brain Injury Association of America: About Brain Injury. Retrieved 3 26 2017 from http://www.biausa.org/about-brain-injury.htm .

4. Wislowska M, Giudice RD, Lechinger J, Wielek T, Heib DP, Pitiot A, et al. Night and day variations of sleep in patients with disorders of consciousness. Sci Rep. 2017;7(1):266.

5. •• Imbach LL, Büchele F, Valko PO, Li T, Maric A, Stover JF, et al. Sleep-wake disorders persist 18 months after traumatic brain injury but remain underrecognized. Neurology. 2016;86(21):1945–9. Researchers screened 140 patients with acute, first-ever traumatic brain injury of any severity and included 60 patients for prospective follow-up examinations. Researchers found that sleep need per 24 hours was persistently increased in trauma patients (8.1 ± 0.5 hours) as compared to healthy controls (7.1 ± 0.7 hours) 18 months after the injury. Importantly, TBI patients significantly underestimated excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep need.

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