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Fatigue and sleep disturbance following traumatic brain injury--their nature, causes, and potential treatments.

The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation
January 1, 2012
Jennie L Ponsford et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the nature and causes of fatigue and sleep disturbances following traumatic brain injury (TBI), including the role of melatonin production.

Results Summary

The study found that fatigue and sleep disturbances are common in TBI patients, associated with anxiety, depression, and pain, and linked to reduced melatonin production and altered sleep architecture. Potential treatments like melatonin supplementation were suggested.

Population

Community-based patients with TBI recruited from a rehabilitation program.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (13)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
-
increase
Fatigue and sleep disturbance
community-based patients with TBI
-
are common
#1
-
increase
Fatigue and sleep disturbance
community-based patients with TBI
-
are associated with
#2
-
increase
Fatigue
community-based patients with TBI
-
is also associated with
#3
-
increase
Sleep disturbances
community-based patients with TBI
-
contribute to
#4
-
decrease
Objective sleep studies
community-based patients with TBI
-
show reduced
#5
-
increase
Objective sleep studies
community-based patients with TBI
-
show increased
#6
-
increase
Depression and pain
community-based patients with TBI
-
exacerbate but cannot entirely account for
#7
-
increase
slow-wave sleep
Individuals with TBI
-
There is increased
#8
-
decrease
Individuals with TBI
Individuals with TBI
-
show lower levels of
#9
-
decrease
lower levels of evening melatonin production
Individuals with TBI
-
associated with less
#10
cognitive behavior therapy supporting lifestyle modifications
increase
alertness, vigilance, and mood
Individuals with TBI
-
suggest potential treatments including
#11
pharmacologic treatments with modafinil and melatonin
increase
alertness, vigilance, and mood
Individuals with TBI
-
suggest potential treatments including
#12
light therapy
increase
alertness, vigilance, and mood
Individuals with TBI
-
suggest potential treatments including
#13
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although fatigue and sleep disturbance are commonly reported following traumatic brain injury (TBI), understanding of their nature and treatment remains limited. OBJECTIVES: This article reviews a series of investigations of the nature and causes of fatigue and sleep disturbance following TBI. METHODS: A large cohort of community-based patients with TBI, recruited from a TBI rehabilitation program, completed measures of subjective fatigue and sleep disturbances, as well as attentional measures. A subgroup of participants completed polysomnography and assessment of dim light melatonin onset. RESULTS: Fatigue and sleep disturbance are common. Both are associated with anxiety, depression, and pain. However, fatigue is also associated with slowed information processing and the need for increased effort in performing tasks. Sleep disturbances contribute to fatigue. Objective sleep studies show reduced sleep efficiency, increased sleep onset latency, and increased time awake after sleep onset. Depression and pain exacerbate but cannot entirely account for these problems. There is increased slow-wave sleep. Individuals with TBI show lower levels of evening melatonin production, associated with less rapid-eye movement sleep. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest potential treatments including cognitive behavior therapy supporting lifestyle modifications, pharmacologic treatments with modafinil and melatonin, and light therapy to enhance alertness, vigilance, and mood. Controlled trials of these interventions are needed.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Activities of Daily LivingAdaptation, PhysiologicalAdolescentAdultAustraliaBrain InjuriesChronic PainCombined Modality TherapyDepressionFatigueFemaleHumansInjury Severity ScoreMaleMiddle AgedNeuropsychological TestsPhysical ExaminationPolysomnographyPrognosisQuality of LifeRisk FactorsSickness Impact ProfileSleep Wake DisordersYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy65/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations148
Citations/Year11.4
Relative Citation Ratio6.40
NIH Percentile95.3%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.58
Normalized Score0.61
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