1. Sleep Performance and Chronotype Behavior in Unilateral Vestibular Hypofunction
- Author
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Beatrice Micarelli, Rossella Pistillo, Andrea Viziano, Alessandro Micarelli, Marco Alessandrini, and Ivan Granito
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Vestibular disorders ,Audiology ,Vestibular hypofunction ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,Medicine ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Posturography ,Chronotype ,Actigraphy ,Middle Aged ,Vestibular Function Tests ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Sleep time ,Healthy Volunteers ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Vestibular Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Chronic Disease ,Quality of Life ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,Self Report ,business ,Sleep - Abstract
Objective To evaluate sleep behavior and its relation to otoneurological parameters in a group of patients with chronic unilateral vestibular hypofunction (UVH) without self-reported sleep disturbances when compared with healthy subjects serving as a control group (CG). Methods Fifty-one patients affected by UVH underwent a retrospective clinical and instrumental otoneurological examination, a 1-week actigraphy sleep analysis, and a series of self-report and performance measures (SRM/PM). A CG of 60 gender- and age-matched healthy subjects was also enrolled. A between-group analysis of variance was performed for each variable, while correlation analysis was performed in UVH patients between otoneurological, SRM/PM, and actigraphy measure scores. Results When compared with CG subjects, UVH patients were found to be spending less time sleeping and taking more time to go from being fully awake to asleep, based on actigraphy-based sleep analysis. Also, SRM/PM depicted UVH patients to have poor sleep quality and to be more prone to an evening-type behavior. Correlations were found between vestibular-related functionality indexes and subjective sleep quality, as well as between longer disease duration and reduced sleep time. Conclusion For the first time, a multiparametric sleep analysis was performed on a large population-based sample of chronic UVH patients. While a different pattern in sleep behavior was found, the cause is still unclear. Further research is needed to expand the extent of knowledge about sleep disruption in vestibular disorders. Level of evidence Level 3 Laryngoscope, 2021.
- Published
- 2021