| Literature DB >> 33825252 |
Vi-Huong Nguyen-Michel1,2, Bastien Herlin2,3,4, Ana Gales2,5, Soraia Vaz2, Pierre Levy6, Sophie Dupont2,3,4, Claude Adam2, Vincent Navarro1,2,4,7, Valerio Frazzini1,2,7.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to compare the performance of video- electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring and standard polysomnography for sleep scoring in an Epileptology Unit. We calculated the level of agreement between two methods of sleep scoring, using either 27-electrode video-EEG or polysomnography for 1 night in 22 patients admitted to our Epileptology Unit. Independent experts manually scored sleep using the American Academy of Sleep Medicine 2017 guidelines. We evaluated the number of sleep cycles and their distribution on hypnogram, total sleep time, sleep efficiency, sleep and rapid eye movement sleep-onset latency, wake after sleep-onset, and sleep stages. We then extracted sub-samples of recordings to examine the agreement in microarousal and rapid eye movement scoring. We used Bland and Altman plots and Cohen's kappa test to measure agreement. Bland and Altman plots showed at least 95% agreement for all studied sleep parameters with the exception of wake after sleep onset, where there was an 11 min difference. Cohen's kappa test showed an agreement for the recognition of microarousal (0.89) and of rapid eye movements (0.96) in sub-samples. Video-EEG represents an acceptable alternative tool for sleep architecture study in patients admitted to an Epileptology Unit.Entities:
Keywords: epilepsy monitoring; epilepsy unit; sleep monitoring; sleep quality
Year: 2021 PMID: 33825252 DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sleep Res ISSN: 0962-1105 Impact factor: 3.981