| Literature DB >> 20624250 |
Albert C Yang1, Cheng-Hung Yang1, Chen-Jee Hong1, Shih-Jen Tsai1, Chung-Hsun Kuo1, Chung-Kang Peng1, Joseph E Mietus1, Ary L Goldberger1, Robert J Thomas1.
Abstract
Sleep disruption is an important aspect of major depressive disorder but lacks an objective and inexpensive means of assessment. We evaluated the utility of electrocardiogram (ECG)-based cardiopulmonary coupling analysis to quantify physiologic sleep stability in patients with major depression. Relative to controls, unmedicated depressed patients had a reduction in high-frequency coupling, an index of stable sleep, an increase in low-frequency coupling, an index of unstable sleep, and an increase in very-low-frequency coupling, an index of wakefulness/REM sleep. The medicated depressed group showed a restoration of stable sleep to a level comparable with that of the control group. ECG-based cardiopulmonary coupling analysis may provide a simple, cost-efficient point-of-care method to quantify sleep quality/stability and to objectively evaluate the severity of insomnia in patients with major depression.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiopulmonary coupling analysis; Cyclic alternating pattern; Depression; Electrocardiogram-derived sleep spectrogram; Insomnia; Sleep stability
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 20624250 PMCID: PMC2958224 DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2010.01060.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychophysiology ISSN: 0048-5772 Impact factor: 4.016