Sleep disturbances are commonly reported among patients presenting to a gastroenterology clinic

S Ballou, E Alhassan, E Hon, C Lembo… - Digestive diseases and …, 2018 - Springer
S Ballou, E Alhassan, E Hon, C Lembo, V Rangan, P Singh, W Hirsch, T Sommers, J Iturrino…
Digestive diseases and sciences, 2018Springer
Background Poor sleep quality is common among patients with gastrointestinal (GI)
disorders. However, few studies have assessed the presence of insomnia or reported
circadian preferences and none have directly compared sleep between common GI
conditions. Aims To compare clinical sleep characteristics in patients presenting to a tertiary
care GI clinic for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), functional dyspepsia (FD), inflammatory
bowel disease (IBD), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and celiac disease (CD) …
Background
Poor sleep quality is common among patients with gastrointestinal (GI) disorders. However, few studies have assessed the presence of insomnia or reported circadian preferences and none have directly compared sleep between common GI conditions.
Aims
To compare clinical sleep characteristics in patients presenting to a tertiary care GI clinic for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), functional dyspepsia (FD), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and celiac disease (CD).
Methods
Validated sleep measures were administered to consecutive patients if they were diagnosed with IBS, IBD in clinical remission, CD, FD, or GERD. Healthy Controls (HCs) with no reported GI diagnoses or symptoms were also recruited.
Results
A total of 212 eligible respondents completed this survey, 161 GI clinic patients (IBS (n = 48), GERD (n = 29), IBD in clinical remission (n = 44), CD (n = 40)), and 41 HCs. Only, 10 respondents had a diagnosis of FD, and these were excluded. The IBS group had the highest frequency of poor sleep (72%) followed by CD (61%), GERD (60%), IBD (54%), and HC (39%). IBS patients also had the highest frequency of clinical insomnia (51%), followed by GERD (37%), CD (35%), IBD (27%), and HC (18%). 40% of IBS patients reported taking sleep medications at least once per week, compared to 32% of GERD, 23% IBD, 13% CD, and 15% HC.
Conclusions
Patients presenting to a tertiary care GI clinic report poorer sleep than healthy controls. In general, patients with IBS report the highest rates of sleep difficulties compared to patients with other diagnoses.
Springer
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果