Excessive daytime sleepiness in adults with brain injuries

Nov 2, 2001Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation

Strong daytime sleepiness in adults after brain injury

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Abstract

In a cohort of 71 adults with brain injuries, 47% exhibited excessive daytime sleepiness as indicated by a mean sleep latency of ≤10 minutes.

  • 18.3% of subjects had a mean sleep latency of ≤5 minutes, indicating severe daytime sleepiness.
  • Participants were categorized into three groups based on sleepiness and objective measures: nonhypersomnolent (53%), hypersomnolent with abnormal indices (17%), and hypersomnolent with normal indices (30%).
  • No significant differences were observed in Glasgow Coma Scale scores, length of coma, or time since brain injury among the groups.
  • Demographic factors such as nature of the injury, gender, and medications showed no differences across the groups.
  • Self-report questionnaires (Epworth Sleepiness Scale and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index) did not correlate with objective sleepiness measurements.

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