医学
体质指数
胎龄
妊娠期
儿科
多导睡眠图
前瞻性队列研究
失眠症
怀孕
物理疗法
睡眠(系统调用)
睡眠开始
麻醉
内科学
呼吸暂停
精神科
操作系统
生物
遗传学
计算机科学
作者
Danielle M. Panelli,Hyman Miller,Samantha Simpson,Janet Hurtado,Chi-Hung Shu,Ana C. Boncompagni,Jane Chueh,Fiona Barwick,Brendan Carvalho,Pervez Sultan,Nima Aghaeepour,Maurice L. Druzin
标识
DOI:10.1097/aog.0000000000005591
摘要
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether antepartum hospitalization was associated with differences in sleep duration or disrupted sleep patterns. METHODS: This was a prospective cohort study with enrollment of pregnant people aged 18–55 years with singleton gestations at 16 weeks of gestation or more between 2021 and 2022. Each enrolled antepartum patient was matched by gestational age to outpatients recruited from obstetric clinics at the same institution. Participants responded to the ISI (Insomnia Severity Index) and wore actigraph accelerometer watches for up to 7 days. The primary outcome was total sleep duration per 24 hours. Secondary outcomes included sleep efficiency (time asleep/time in bed), ISI score, clinical insomnia (ISI score higher than 15), short sleep duration (less than 300 minutes/24 hours), wakefulness after sleep onset, number of awakenings, and sleep fragmentation index. Outcomes were evaluated with multivariable generalized estimating equations adjusted for body mass index (BMI), sleep aid use, and insurance type, accounting for gestational age correlations. An interaction term assessed the joint effects of time and inpatient status. RESULTS: Overall 58 participants were included: 18 inpatients and 40 outpatients. Inpatients had significantly lower total sleep duration than outpatients (mean 4.4 hours [SD 1.6 hours] inpatient vs 5.2 hours [SD 1.5 hours] outpatient, adjusted β=−1.1, 95% CI, −1.8 to −0.3, P =.01). Awakenings (10.1 inpatient vs 13.8, P =.01) and wakefulness after sleep onset (28.3 inpatient vs 35.5 outpatient, P =.03) were lower among inpatients. There were no differences in the other sleep outcomes, and no interaction was detected for time in the study and inpatient status. Inpatients were more likely to use sleep aids (39.9% vs 12.5%, P =.03). CONCLUSION: Hospitalized pregnant patients slept about 1 hour/day less than outpatients. Fewer awakenings and reduced wakefulness after sleep onset among inpatients may reflect increased use of sleep aids in hospitalized patients.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI