11 results on '"Birgit Högl"'
Search Results
2. Language analysis of spontaneous descriptions of restless legs syndrome: Gender differences?
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Frank Domahs, Tugba Zengin, Elisabeth Brandauer, Melanie Bergmann, Ambra Stefani, Evi Holzknecht, Margarete Delazer, Margarethe Hochleitner, and Birgit Högl
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Frequent use ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Linguistic analysis ,Sex Factors ,Internal medicine ,Restless Legs Syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Restless legs syndrome ,Prospective Studies ,Language analysis ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Sentence ,Language - Abstract
Patients with restless legs syndrome (RLS) use various terms when describing their symptoms. Whether gender might influence this has not been investigated so far. The aim of this study was to evaluate possible gender differences in spontaneous descriptions of RLS symptoms. This prospective study, conducted in 100 consecutive German-speaking RLS patients, used a single standardized question. Answers were digitally recorded and transcribed. A content-related linguistic analysis of the transcripts was performed by two independent blinded raters. The lengths of the answers and content-related linguistic features were compared between women and men. Ninety-eight patients were included in the final analysis, 59 women (60.2%) and 39 men (39.8%), with a median age of 62 (23-94) and 63 (31-82) years, respectively (p = 0.602). Demographic and clinical features, including educational level and RLS treatment class, did not differ between genders (p > 0.05). Total word or sentence count showed no gender differences (p = 0.159 and 0.259, respectively), although men used more words per sentence than women (p = 0.018). More men than women described quiescegenic (i.e., triggered by rest or inactivity) symptoms (p = 0.006) and successful attempts at relief (p = 0.039). There was a non-significant trend toward a more frequent use of the first-person perspective in men (median times used = 5 [0-10.5] vs. 3.8 [0-17.5], p = 0.068). The more frequent mention of quiescegenic symptoms and successful attempts at relief in men could indicate differences in phenotypic presentation of RLS between genders, a more precise description of RLS symptoms or a higher experience of self-efficacy in men compared to women.
- Published
- 2021
3. Contactless detection of periodic leg movements during sleep: A 3D video pilot study
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Marion Böck, Markus A. Wimmer, Gerhard Klösch, Markus Gall, Heinrich Garn, Bernhard Kohn, Markus Waser, Stefan Seidel, Magdalena Mandl, Carmina Coronel, Andrijana Stefanic, Birgit Högl, and Christoph Wiesmeyr
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,3d analysis ,Pilot Projects ,restless sleep ,video ,Sleep medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,arousal ,Restless Legs Syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,Regular Research Paper ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Sleep laboratory ,Methodology ,Videotape Recording ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Sleep time ,Movement analysis ,030228 respiratory system ,automatic movement detection ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Algorithms ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In clinical practice, the quality of polysomnographic recordings in children and patients with neurodegenerative diseases may be affected by sensor displacement and diminished total sleep time due to stress during the recording. In the present study, we investigated if contactless three‐dimensional (3D) detection of periodic leg movements during sleep was comparable to polysomnography. We prospectively studied a sleep laboratory cohort from two Austrian sleep laboratories. Periodic leg movements during sleep were classified according to the standards of the World Association of Sleep Medicine and served as ground truth. Leg movements including respiratory‐related events (A1) and excluding respiratory‐related events (A2 and A3) were presented as A1, A2 and A3. Three‐dimensional movement analysis was carried out using an algorithm developed by the Austrian Institute of Technology. Fifty‐two patients (22 female, mean age 52.2 ± 15.1 years) were included. Periodic leg movement during sleep indexes were significantly higher with 3D detection compared to polysomnography (33.3 [8.1–97.2] vs. 30.7 [2.9–91.9]: +9.1%, p = .0055/27.8 [4.5–86.2] vs. 24.2 [0.00–88.7]: +8.2%, p = .0154/31.8 [8.1–89.5] vs. 29.6 [2.4–91.1]: +8.9%, p = .0129). Contactless automatic 3D analysis has the potential to detect restlessness mirrored by periodic leg movements during sleep reliably and may especially be suited for children and the elderly.
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- 2020
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4. Gender differences in clinical, laboratory and polysomnographic features of restless legs syndrome
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Gregor K. Wenning, Ambra Stefani, Evi Holzknecht, Birgit Högl, and Margarethe Hochleitner
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,Neurological disorder ,Motor symptoms ,Internal medicine ,Restless Legs Syndrome ,mental disorders ,RLS severity scales ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Sensory symptoms ,Restless legs syndrome ,Regular Research Paper ,Serum ferritin ,Retrospective Studies ,Sex Characteristics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,symptoms manifestation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Periodic leg movements during sleep ,Serum iron ,RLS phenotype ,Restlesss Legs Syndrome ,Female ,business - Abstract
Summary Restless legs syndrome is a common neurological disorder with a clear female predominance. This study aims to evaluate gender differences in clinical, laboratory and polysomnographic features in patients with restless legs syndrome. For this retrospective analysis, 42 women and 42 men from the Innsbruck RLS database matched by age and therapy were included. Demographic data as well as different severity scales (IRLS, RLS‐6 and CGI) were evaluated. Laboratory parameters included several indicators of serum iron status. In all patients, polysomnography was performed according to the AASM guidelines, and periodic leg movements during sleep were scored according to the AASM criteria. IRLS, RLS‐6 and CGI revealed more severe symptoms in women (IRLS median [range]: 17.5 [0–35] versus 13.5 [0–32], p = 0.028; RLS‐6 median [range]: 18 [0–39] versus 12 [1–42], p = 0.014). Women had lower serum ferritin levels than men (median [range] in μg L−1: 74 [9–346] versus 167 [15–389], p
- Published
- 2019
5. Narcolepsy-cataplexy: deficient prepulse inhibition of blink reflex suggests pedunculopontine involvement
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Viola Gschliesser, Birgit Högl, Wolfgang Löscher, Markus Kofler, Elisabeth Brandauer, Birgit Frauscher, and Laura Ehrmann
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Cataplexy ,business.industry ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Stimulation ,General Medicine ,Orexin ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Muscle tone ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Medicine ,Corneal reflex ,Brainstem ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,Prepulse inhibition ,Pedunculopontine nucleus - Abstract
Hypocretin (orexin) deficiency plays a major role in the pathophysiology of narcolepsy-cataplexy. In animal models, hypocretinergic projections to the pedunculopontine nucleus are directly involved in muscle tone regulation mediating muscle atonia - a hallmark of cataplexy. We hypothesized that pedunculopontine nucleus function, tested with prepulse inhibition of the blink reflex, is altered in human narcolepsy-cataplexy. Twenty patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy and 20 healthy controls underwent a neurophysiological study of pedunculopontine nucleus function. Blink reflex, prepulse inhibition of the blink reflex and blink reflex excitability recovery were measured. Blink reflex characteristics (R1 latency and amplitude, and R2 and R2c latency and area under the curve) did not differ between patients and controls (P > 0.05). Prepulse stimulation significantly increased R2 and R2c latencies and reduced R2 and R2c areas in patients and controls. However, the R2 and R2c area suppression was significantly less in patients than in controls (to 69.8 ± 14.4 and 74.9 ± 12.6%, respectively, versus 34.5 ± 28.6 and 43.3 ± 29.5%, respectively; each P 0.05). Our data showed that prepulse inhibition is reduced in narcolepsy-cataplexy, whereas unconditioned blink reflex and its excitability recovery are normal. Because the pedunculopontine nucleus is important for prepulse inhibition, these results suggest its functional involvement in narcolepsy-cataplexy.
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- 2012
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6. Can observers link dream content to behaviours in rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder? A cross-sectional experimental pilot study
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Suzana Veiga Schönwald, Sylvia Boesch, Isabelle Marti, Viola Gschliesser, Birgit Högl, Birgit Frauscher, Anja Zangerl, Antti Revonsuo, Werner Poewe, Elisabeth Wolf, Katja Valli, Tina Falkenstetter, and Laura Ehrmann
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sleep laboratory ,Eye movement ,General Medicine ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder ,Sleep behaviour ,medicine ,Motor activity ,Dream ,Content (Freudian dream analysis) ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,media_common - Abstract
Motor activity in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) has been linked to dream content. Systematic and controlled sleep laboratory studies directly assessing the relation betwee ...
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- 2011
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7. Motor disturbances during non-REM and REM sleep in narcolepsy-cataplexy: a video-polysomnographic analysis
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Birgit Frauscher, Viola Gschliesser, Ismail Tokmak, Suzana Veiga Schönwald, Laura Ehrmann, Tina Falkenstetter, Werner Poewe, Birgit Högl, and Elisabeth Brandauer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cataplexy ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Rapid eye movement sleep ,Eye movement ,General Medicine ,Polysomnography ,medicine.disease ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Anesthesia ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Insomnia ,Cardiology ,Body region ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Narcolepsy - Abstract
SUMMARY Motor events during sleep can be frequently observed in patients with narcolepsy– cataplexy. We hypothesized that increased motor events and related arousals contribute to sleep fragmentation in this disease. We aimed to perform a detailed whole-night video-polysomnographic analysis of all motor events during non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in a group of narcolepsy–cataplexy patients and matched controls, and to assess the association with arousals. Video-polysomnographic registrations of six narcolepsy–cataplexy patients and six sex- and age-matched controls were analysed. Each motor event in the video was classified according to topography, number of involved body parts, duration and its association with arousals. The mean motor activity index was 59.9 ± 23.0 h )1 in patients with narcolepsy– cataplexy compared with 15.4 ± 9.2 h )1 in controls (P = 0.004). Distribution of motor events was similar in non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in the patient group (P = 0.219). In narcolepsy–cataplexy, motor events involved significantly more body parts (‡ 2 body regions: 38.2 ± 15.6 versus 14.9 ± 10.0; P = 0.011). In addition, the proportion of motor events lasting longer than 1 s was higher in patients than controls (88% versus 44.4%; P < 0.001). Both total and motor activity-related arousal indices were increased in narcolepsy–cataplexy (total arousal index: 21.6 ± 9.0 versus 8.7 ± 3.5; P = 0.004; motor activity-related arousal index: 17.6 ± 9.8 versus 5.9 ± 2.3; P = 0.002). Motor activity and motor activity-related arousal indices are increased in both non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in narcolepsy–cataplexy compared with controls. This supports the concept of a general sleep motor dysregulation in narcolepsy–cataplexy, which potentially contributes to or even underlies sleep fragmentation in this disease.
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- 2011
- Full Text
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8. Oxygen desaturation during night sleep affects decision-making in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
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Ambra Stefani, Margarete Delazer, Birgit Högl, Birgit Frauscher, Laura Zamarian, Thomas Mitterling, and Anna Heidbreder
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Adult ,Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Polysomnography ,Decision Making ,Neuropsychological Tests ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Oxygen saturation (medicine) ,Sleep Apnea, Obstructive ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Neuropsychological test ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Executive functions ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Iowa gambling task ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Oxygen ,Case-Control Studies ,Gambling ,Cardiology ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Psychology ,Sleep ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Summary This study assessed decision-making and its associations with executive functions and sleep-related factors in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. Thirty patients with untreated obstructive sleep apnea and 20 healthy age- and education-matched controls performed the Iowa Gambling Task, a decision-making task under initial ambiguity, as well as an extensive neuropsychological test battery. Patients, but not controls, also underwent a detailed polysomnographic assessment. Results of group analyses showed that patients performed at the same level of controls on the Iowa Gambling Task. However, the proportion of risky performers was significantly higher in the patient group than in the control group. Decision-making did not correlate with executive functions and subjective ratings of sleepiness, whereas there was a significant positive correlation between advantageous performance on the Iowa Gambling Task and percentage of N2 sleep, minimal oxygen saturation, average oxygen saturation and time spent below 90% oxygen saturation level. Also, the minimal oxygen saturation accounted for 27% of variance in decision-making. In conclusion, this study shows that a subgroup of patients with obstructive sleep apnea may be at risk of disadvantageous decision-making under ambiguity. Among the sleep-related factors, oxygen saturation is a significant predictor of advantageous decision-making.
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- 2015
9. Narcolepsy-cataplexy: deficient prepulse inhibition of blink reflex suggests pedunculopontine involvement
- Author
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Birgit, Frauscher, Wolfgang N, Löscher, Laura, Ehrmann, Viola, Gschliesser, Elisabeth, Brandauer, Birgit, Högl, and Markus, Kofler
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Adult ,Male ,Young Adult ,Cataplexy ,Blinking ,Case-Control Studies ,Pedunculopontine Tegmental Nucleus ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Abstract
Hypocretin (orexin) deficiency plays a major role in the pathophysiology of narcolepsy-cataplexy. In animal models, hypocretinergic projections to the pedunculopontine nucleus are directly involved in muscle tone regulation mediating muscle atonia - a hallmark of cataplexy. We hypothesized that pedunculopontine nucleus function, tested with prepulse inhibition of the blink reflex, is altered in human narcolepsy-cataplexy. Twenty patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy and 20 healthy controls underwent a neurophysiological study of pedunculopontine nucleus function. Blink reflex, prepulse inhibition of the blink reflex and blink reflex excitability recovery were measured. Blink reflex characteristics (R1 latency and amplitude, and R2 and R2c latency and area under the curve) did not differ between patients and controls (P0.05). Prepulse stimulation significantly increased R2 and R2c latencies and reduced R2 and R2c areas in patients and controls. However, the R2 and R2c area suppression was significantly less in patients than in controls (to 69.8 ± 14.4 and 74.9 ± 12.6%, respectively, versus 34.5 ± 28.6 and 43.3 ± 29.5%, respectively; each P0.001). Blink reflex excitability recovery, as measured by paired-pulse stimulation, which is not mediated via the pedunculopontine nucleus, did not differ between patients and controls (P0.05). Our data showed that prepulse inhibition is reduced in narcolepsy-cataplexy, whereas unconditioned blink reflex and its excitability recovery are normal. Because the pedunculopontine nucleus is important for prepulse inhibition, these results suggest its functional involvement in narcolepsy-cataplexy.
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- 2012
10. Can observers link dream content to behaviours in rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder? A cross-sectional experimental pilot study
- Author
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Katja, Valli, Birgit, Frauscher, Viola, Gschliesser, Elisabeth, Wolf, Tina, Falkenstetter, Suzana V, Schönwald, Laura, Ehrmann, Anja, Zangerl, Isabelle, Marti, Sylvia M, Boesch, Antti, Revonsuo, Werner, Poewe, and Birgit, Högl
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Facial Expression ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Parkinsonian Disorders ,Polysomnography ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Video Recording ,Humans ,Sleep, REM ,Pilot Projects ,REM Sleep Behavior Disorder ,Middle Aged ,Motor Activity ,Dreams - Abstract
Motor activity in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) has been linked to dream content. Systematic and controlled sleep laboratory studies directly assessing the relation between RBD behaviours and experienced dream content are, however, largely lacking. We aimed to investigate whether a link can be established between RBD behaviours and dream content when both are systematically sampled in a controlled setting. We investigated six patients with Parkinson syndrome and RBD who underwent 2-3 nights of video-polysomnographic recording during which they were awakened from REM sleep (10 min after the onset of the second and successive REM periods). Spontaneous free-worded dream reports and a structured dream questionnaire were obtained. Video recordings of motor manifestations were each combined with four dream reports, and seven judges had to match the video clip with the correctly reported dream content from a choice of four possibilities. Of the 35 REM sleep awakenings performed, a total of 17 (48.6%) motor-behavioural episodes with recalled dream content were obtained. The mean of correctly identified video-dream pairs was 39.5% (range 0-100%). Our data showed that reported dream content can be linked to motor behaviours above chance level. Matching accuracy was affected mainly by the clarity of dream reports and the specific nature of movements manifest in video recordings.
- Published
- 2011
11. Motor disturbances during non-REM and REM sleep in narcolepsy-cataplexy: a video-polysomnographic analysis
- Author
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Birgit, Frauscher, Viola, Gschliesser, Elisabeth, Brandauer, Suzana V, Schönwald, Tina, Falkenstetter, Laura, Ehrmann, Ismail, Tokmak, Werner, Poewe, and Birgit, Högl
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Movement ,Polysomnography ,Video Recording ,Sleep, REM ,Middle Aged ,Motor Activity ,Young Adult ,Case-Control Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Sleep Stages ,Arousal ,Narcolepsy - Abstract
Motor events during sleep can be frequently observed in patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy. We hypothesized that increased motor events and related arousals contribute to sleep fragmentation in this disease. We aimed to perform a detailed whole-night video-polysomnographic analysis of all motor events during non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in a group of narcolepsy-cataplexy patients and matched controls, and to assess the association with arousals. Video-polysomnographic registrations of six narcolepsy-cataplexy patients and six sex- and age-matched controls were analysed. Each motor event in the video was classified according to topography, number of involved body parts, duration and its association with arousals. The mean motor activity index was 59.9 ± 23.0 h(-1) in patients with narcolepsy-cataplexy compared with 15.4 ± 9.2 h(-1) in controls (P = 0.004). Distribution of motor events was similar in non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in the patient group (P = 0.219). In narcolepsy-cataplexy, motor events involved significantly more body parts (≥ 2 body regions: 38.2 ± 15.6 versus 14.9 ± 10.0; P = 0.011). In addition, the proportion of motor events lasting longer than 1 s was higher in patients than controls (88% versus 44.4%; P0.001). Both total and motor activity-related arousal indices were increased in narcolepsy-cataplexy (total arousal index: 21.6 ± 9.0 versus 8.7 ± 3.5; P = 0.004; motor activity-related arousal index: 17.6 ± 9.8 versus 5.9 ± 2.3; P = 0.002). Motor activity and motor activity-related arousal indices are increased in both non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep in narcolepsy-cataplexy compared with controls. This supports the concept of a general sleep motor dysregulation in narcolepsy-cataplexy, which potentially contributes to or even underlies sleep fragmentation in this disease.
- Published
- 2011
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