SLEEP MONITORING IN MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT USING NONINVASIVE, UNDER THE SHEET SENSORS

A. Almaghasilah, K. Daigle, C. Gilbert, E. Sulinski,J. Aronis, A. Bouchard, T. Delp,C. Singer,A. Abedi,M. Hayes

Sleep(2018)

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Abstract
Sleep disorders (SD) are common in people with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) from early Alzheimer’s disease (AD). This study investigated whether a new, inexpensive pressure-sensing technology of sleep monitoring could differentiate MCI patients from age-matched, cognitively normal controls. MCI-diagnosed (n=10) and age-matched controls with normal cognition (NC) (n=10), 65–85 years of age, recruited from a memory disorder clinic and community respectively, were studied in the home (2 nights) with a flat-sheet mattress pressure-sensor device and standard wrist actigraphy (7 nights). Resistive sensor technology, signal processing and statistical inference identified 2 distinct signature biomarkers of SD: high frequency (2–5’), low amplitude movement arousals (MAs) (not measured with standard actigraphy), and respiratory rate (RR). MA and spontaneous movement (SM)-RR coupling; a time series segmentation analysis of respiratory variability linked to MAs. Flat-sheet pressure sensor device-based sleep-wake and full arousals were based on the Kripke algorithm and compared to standard actigraphy. Standard actigraphy algorithm sleep scoring did not discriminate MCI from NC on any sleep variable although immobility trended higher in MCI (p
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Key words
sleep monitoring,mild cognitive impairment,sheet sensors
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