Journal article
Sleep architectural dysfunction and undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea after chronic ischemic stroke
E Gottlieb, MS Khlif, L Bird, E Werden, T Churchward, MP Pase, N Egorova, ME Howard, A Brodtmann
Sleep Medicine | Published : 2021
Abstract
Objective/background: Sleep-wake dysfunction is bidirectionally associated with the incidence and evolution of acute stroke. It remains unclear whether sleep disturbances are transient post-stroke or are potentially enduring sequelae in chronic stroke. Here, we characterize sleep architectural dysfunction, sleep-respiratory parameters, and hemispheric sleep in ischemic stroke patients in the chronic recovery phase compared to healthy controls. Patients/methods: Radiologically confirmed ischemic stroke patients (n = 28) and matched control participants (n = 16) were tested with ambulatory polysomnography, bi-hemispheric sleep EEG, and demographic, stroke-severity, mood, and sleep-circadian qu..
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Awarded by National Institute on Aging
Funding Acknowledgements
M.P.P. is funded by a National Heart Foundation to Australia Future Leader Fellowship (102052), with funding for sleep research from the National Health and Medical Research Council (GTN1158384), National Institute on Aging (1R01AG062531-01A1), and Alzheimer's Association (2018-AARG-591358). N.E. is supported by Australian Research Council (DE180100893). A.B. is funded by a Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellowship (100784) and by the National Health and Medical Research Council (GTN1094974, GTN1020526).