Personalized Risk Assessment of Seizures Sensitive to Poor Sleep: a Longitudinal Study Using Wearable Electroencephalography Devices
Duke University
Summary
Epilepsy, a prevalent neurological disorder, affects 40% of patients with uncontrolled seizures despite medications. Sleep disturbance exacerbates epilepsy, and vice versa, but existing literature suffers from limitations. Studies conducted in hospital settings provide only brief observation periods and fail to capture the natural sleep environment. Wearable technology offers a promising solution, providing a nuanced understanding of the relationship between seizures and sleep. The Dreem headband, an EEG-based wearable, is well-suited for such studies, offering ease of use and validated accuracy. This technology enables extended observation periods under stable medication conditions, essential for assessing the complex interplay between sleep and epilepsy. By elucidating the impact of sleep on seizures, the researchers seek to identify patient populations where sleep significantly influences seizure susceptibility, ultimately informing personalized epilepsy treatments.
Description
The first aim of this study is to investigate how variations in sleep timing, duration, and structure influence seizure risk, particularly in individuals with sleep-sensitive seizures. The investigators will conduct longitudinal EEG assessments to analyze how changes in sleep features correlate with interictal epileptiform discharge rates and seizure occurrences over time. The second aim is to develop a sleep quality index that predicts individual risk for sleep-sensitive seizures, the Sleep-Sensitive Epilepsy Risk Index (SERI). This index aims to predict an individual's seizure risk associat…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Age \> 18 years * At least 2 seizures per week based on clinical notes * Patients where medications will stay stable over the study period * 40% of both spikes and spindles are identifiable on the dreem headband based on the screening night Exclusion Criteria: * Cognitive impairment * Psychiatric comorbidities which may influence sleep * No bedpartner/caregiver to observe seizures * Low agreement (below 60%) between Dreem's sleep scoring and manual scoring will be excluded from the study * Apnea-hypopnea index of \> 10/h
Interventions
- DeviceDreem headband
The Dreem headband is an EEG-based wearable tool that can be used to reliably assess the relationship between sleep and epilepsy over extended observation periods.
Location
- Duke University Health SystemDurham, North Carolina