Use of actigraphy for monitoring agitation and rest-activity cycles in patients with acute traumatic brain injury in the ICU

BRAIN INJURY(2024)

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Abstract
BackgroundIn traumatic brain injury patients (TBI) admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), agitation can lead to accidental removal of catheters, devices as well as self-extubation and falls. Actigraphy could be a potential tool to continuously monitor agitation. The objectives of this study were to assess the feasibility of monitoring agitation with actigraphs and to compare activity levels in agitated and non-agitated critically ill TBI patients.MethodsActigraphs were placed on patients' wrists; 24-hour monitoring was continued until ICU discharge or limitation of therapeutic efforts. Feasibility was assessed by actigraphy recording duration and missing activity count per day.ResultsData from 25 patients were analyzed. The mean number of completed day of actigraphy per patient was 6.5 +/- 5.1. The mean missing activity count was 20.3 minutes (+/- 81.7) per day. The mean level of activity measured by raw actigraphy counts per minute over 24 hours was higher in participants with agitation than without agitation.ConclusionsThis study supports the feasibility of actigraphy use in TBI patients in the ICU. In the acute phase of TBI, agitated patients have higher levels of activity, confirming the potential of actigraphy to monitor agitation.
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Key words
Traumatic brain injury,actigraphy,intensive care,agitation,sleep,rest-activity cycle
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