| Literature DB >> 27011178 |
Michael Joseph Lavery1, Carolyn Stull2, Michael Owen Kinney3, Gil Yosipovitch4.
Abstract
Chronic pruritus is a debilitating condition with numerous etiologies. Many patients suffer from nocturnal pruritus, which can decrease quality of life and affect mortality in hemodialysis patients. Nocturnal pruritus may occur in all sleep stages but is most prevalent in stages N1 and N2. Further research is needed to elucidate the pathophysiology of nocturnal itch, which will aid in the development of tailored management strategies.Entities:
Keywords: atopic dermatitis; circadian rhythm; physiology; pruritus; sleep; sleep cycle
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27011178 PMCID: PMC4813276 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17030425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Stages of sleep and the associated features.
| Stage of Sleep | Electroencephalogram (EEG) Characteristics and Associated Sleep Stage Features |
|---|---|
| Wakefulness | Mainly alpha (8–13 Hz) and beta activity (>13 Hz) on EEG |
| N1 (formerly Stage 1) (10% of sleep time) | Slow theta waves (4–7 Hz) emerge on EEG |
| Rolling eye movements | |
| Lightest stage of sleep | |
| N2 (formerly Stage 2) (50% of sleep time) | Background theta wave, less than 20% delta waves. Sleep spindles (central 14–16 Hz rhythms) and K complexes (0.5–1 s high amplitude central sharp waves) on EEG. |
| Eye movements usually cease | |
| N3 (formerly Stages 3 + 4) (20% of sleep time) | High amplitude delta waves (<4 Hz) on EEG |
| Eye movements are slow or absent | |
| Deepest stage of sleep | |
| Low voltage, mixed frequency background on EEG | |
| Saccadic eye movements | |
| 80% of dreams occur in this stage. They may be recalled easily especially if immediate awakening after dream onset | |
(Abbreviations: EEG = electro-encephalogram; EOG = electro-oculogram; NREM = Non-Rapid Eye Movement; REM = Rapid Eye Movement)
Figure 1Hypnogram of normal sleep.
Common causes of nocturnal pruritus.
| Category | Disease |
|---|---|
| Dermatological | Atopic dermatitis |
| Psoriasis | |
| Chronic idiopathic urticaria | |
| Infestations (scabies, bed bugs, pediculosis, pinworms) | |
| Lichen planus | |
| Lichen simplex chronicus | |
| Prurigo nodularis | |
| Non-Dermatological | Liver disease |
| Chronic kidney disease | |
| Hematopoietic disorders | |
| Neurological (e.g., brachioradial pruritus) | |
| Psychological (delusional ideations, depression, schizophrenia, stress) | |
| Substance abuse | |
| Advanced age (senile) pruritus | |
| Restless legs syndrome |