Panacea Index Logo

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...

Clinical neurophysiology of circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders.

Handbook of clinical neurology
January 1, 2019
Yumna Saeed et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to explore the role of melatonin in entraining circadian rhythms and treating circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs).

Results Summary

The study highlights melatonin's role in synchronizing the circadian clock with environmental cues and its therapeutic use in CRSWDs, alongside light therapy and sleep hygiene.

Population

Patients with circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (3)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
strategically timed light
decrease
circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs)
Patients with CRSWDs
-
Treatment of the CRSWDs focuses on
#1
strategically timed melatonin
decrease
circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs)
Patients with CRSWDs
-
Treatment of the CRSWDs focuses on
#2
sleep hygiene
decrease
circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs)
Patients with CRSWDs
-
Treatment of the CRSWDs focuses on
#3
Abstract

Circadian rhythms are the endogenous near-24-h oscillations in physiologic processes. In mammals the suprachiasmatic nucleus serves as the primary circadian pacemaker, and it maintains rhythmicity at a genetic level through a complex transcription-translation feedback loop of core circadian clock genes. The circadian clock is entrained to the environment through daily exposure to light and melatonin. Disruption of these endogenous rhythms or the ability to entrain to the surrounding environment results in the circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWDs). Patients with CRSWDs can present with either late sleep/wake times (delayed sleep-wake phase disorder), early sleep/wake times (advanced sleep-wake phase disorder), inconsistent sleep/wake times (irregular sleep-wake rhythm disorder) or sleep-wake times that move progressively later each day (non-24-h sleep-wake rhythm disorder). Diagnosis of these disorders relies on the use of sleep logs and/or actigraphy to demonstrate the daily patterns of rest and activity. Treatment of the CRSWDs focuses on sleep hygiene and strategically timed light and melatonin.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansSleep Disorders, Circadian Rhythm
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality60/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations9
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.55
NIH Percentile29.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.81
Normalized Score0.62
Related Supplements