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Journal of Bronchology & Interventional Pulmonology, 2015
Joseph Cicenia, Charanjit S. Bahniwal
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Joseph Cicenia, Charanjit S. Bahniwal
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Sleep and Sleep Disturbances in the Electroencephalogram
1965Publisher Summary This chapter discusses sleep disturbances using the electroencephalogram (EEG). The EEG offers a limited but continuous insight in one aspect of brain function, and during sleep it shows characteristic changes. In EEG, the classical stages are mentioned, and the most important sleep patterns are described.
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1997
The public health importance of sleep disorders in late life received recognition in the 1990 National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference on the diagnosis and treatment of these disorders.1 Their importance was further underscored by the work of a congressionally mandated National Commission of Sleep Disorders and Sleep Research.2 ...
Charles F. ReynoldsIII+1 more
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The public health importance of sleep disorders in late life received recognition in the 1990 National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference on the diagnosis and treatment of these disorders.1 Their importance was further underscored by the work of a congressionally mandated National Commission of Sleep Disorders and Sleep Research.2 ...
Charles F. ReynoldsIII+1 more
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To Sleep or Not to Sleep: That Remains the Question
Pediatrics, 2004In this issue, Gilbert et al1 have provided some new insights into the utility of sleep deprivation before recording of electroencephalograms (EEGs), to increase the likelihood of identification of interictal epileptiform discharges. A design flaw, which makes the results less universally applicable, is that the subjects and referring physicians both ...
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1984
Survey data reveal that a greater proportion of elderly persons are dissatisfied with the quality of their sleep than any other age group. A number of studies indicate that elderly persons awaken several times per night.1–3 In one study,2 25–30% of all subjects over 65 years of age reported frequent night awakenings, 15% of all subjects 65–75 years of ...
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Survey data reveal that a greater proportion of elderly persons are dissatisfied with the quality of their sleep than any other age group. A number of studies indicate that elderly persons awaken several times per night.1–3 In one study,2 25–30% of all subjects over 65 years of age reported frequent night awakenings, 15% of all subjects 65–75 years of ...
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To sleep or not to sleep: the consequences of sleep deprivation
Critical Care Nurse, 1985openaire +3 more sources
Human beings sleep for about a third of their lives and sleep is not a simply quiescent state of being but many biological and cognitive functions are subserved by its complex structure. Sleep disorders include a large number of different conditions which impact not only sleep and its homeostatic pattern, but also on mood, cognition, and personality ...
Mogavero, Maria P.+4 more
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Mogavero, Maria P.+4 more
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