» Articles » PMID: 18083618

Polysomnographic and Quantitative EEG Analysis of Subjects with Long-term Insomnia Complaints Associated with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2007 Dec 18
PMID 18083618
Citations 22
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: The aims of this study were (1) to characterise the extent and nature of disrupted sleep in individuals with long-term sleep complaints subsequent to mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI), and (2) to determine whether sleep disturbances in MTBI subjects were more characteristic of psychophysiological, psychiatric, or idiopathic insomnia.

Methods: Nine MTBI patients (27.8 months post-injury; SD=15.5 months) and nine control subjects underwent polysomnographic testing and completed self-report questionnaires on sleep quality. Power spectral (FFT) analysis of the sleep onset period was conducted, with both the power and variability in power being quantified.

Results: Individuals with MTBI exhibited long-term sleep difficulties, along with various cognitive and affective abnormalities. The MTBI group had 4% less efficient sleep (p=0.019), shorter REM onset latencies (p=0.011), and longer sleep onset latencies, although the latter were highly variable in the MTBI group (F-test: p=0.012). FFT analysis revealed greater intra-subject variability in the MTBI group in sigma, theta, and delta power during the sleep onset period.

Conclusions: MTBI patients with persistent sleep complaints differ significantly from controls on a number of electrophysiological outcomes, but could not be easily classified into existing insomnia subtypes.

Significance: Sleep disturbances can persist well after the injury in a subset of patients with MTBI.

Citing Articles

Concussion and the Autonomic, Immune, and Endocrine Systems: An Introduction to the Field and a Treatment Framework for Persisting Symptoms.

Pertab J, Merkley T, Winiarski H, Cramond K, Cramond A J Pers Med. 2025; 15(1).

PMID: 39852225 PMC: 11766534. DOI: 10.3390/jpm15010033.


Traumatic brain injury and sleep in military and veteran populations: A literature review.

Landvater J, Kim S, Caswell K, Kwon C, Odafe E, Roe G NeuroRehabilitation. 2024; 55(3):245-270.

PMID: 39121144 PMC: 11613026. DOI: 10.3233/NRE-230380.


EEG spectral power during REM sleep in patients with frontal brain tumor.

Ortega-Leonard L, Del Rio-Portilla Y BMC Neurol. 2023; 23(1):195.

PMID: 37208614 PMC: 10197412. DOI: 10.1186/s12883-023-03243-1.


The Effect of Traumatic Brain Injury on Sleep Architecture and Circadian Rhythms in Mice-A Comparison of High-Frequency Head Impact and Controlled Cortical Injury.

Korthas H, Main B, Harvey A, Buenaventura R, Wicker E, Forcelli P Biology (Basel). 2022; 11(7).

PMID: 36101412 PMC: 9312487. DOI: 10.3390/biology11071031.


Traumatic Brain Injury and Incidence Risk of Sleep Disorders in Nearly 200,000 US Veterans.

Leng Y, Byers A, Barnes D, Peltz C, Li Y, Yaffe K Neurology. 2021; 96(13):e1792-e1799.

PMID: 33658328 PMC: 8055309. DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000011656.