The utility of wearable headband electroencephalography and pulse photoplethysmography to assess cortical and physiological arousal in individuals with stress‐related mental disorders

Author:

Blaskovich Borbala12ORCID,Bullón‐Tarrasó Esteban1,Pöhlchen Dorothee1ORCID,Manafis Alexandros1,Neumayer Hannah1,Besedovsky Luciana2,Brückl Tanja1,Simor Peter34,Binder Florian P.1,Spoormaker Victor I.1ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department Genes and Environment Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry Munich Germany

2. Institute of Medical Psychology, Faculty of Medicine LMU Munich Munich Germany

3. Institute of Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University Budapest Hungary

4. Institute of Behavioral Sciences Semmelweis University Budapest Hungary

Abstract

SummarySeveral stress‐related mental disorders are characterised by disturbed sleep, but objective sleep biomarkers are not routinely examined in psychiatric patients. We examined the use of wearable‐based sleep biomarkers in a psychiatric sample with headband electroencephalography (EEG) including pulse photoplethysmography (PPG), with an additional focus on microstructural elements as especially the shift from low to high frequencies appears relevant for several stress‐related mental disorders. We analysed 371 nights of sufficient quality from 83 healthy participants and those with a confirmed stress‐related mental disorder (anxiety‐affective spectrum). The median value of macrostructural, microstructural (spectral slope fitting), and heart rate variables was calculated across nights and analysed at the individual level (N = 83). The headbands were accepted well by patients and the data quality was sufficient for most nights. The macrostructural analyses revealed trends for significance regarding sleep continuity but not sleep depth variables. The spectral analyses yielded no between‐group differences except for a group × age interaction, with the normal age‐related decline in the low versus high frequency power ratio flattening in the patient group. The PPG analyses showed that the mean heart rate was higher in the patient group in pre‐sleep epochs, a difference that reduced during sleep and dissipated at wakefulness. Wearable devices that record EEG and/or PPG could be used over multiple nights to assess sleep fragmentation, spectral balance, and sympathetic drive throughout the sleep–wake cycle in patients with stress‐related mental disorders and healthy controls, although macrostructural and spectral markers did not differ between the two groups.

Funder

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,General Medicine

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