Measuring sleep in the intensive care unit: Electroencephalogram, actigraphy, or questionnaire?

J Intensive Care Soc. 2020 Feb;21(1):22-27. doi: 10.1177/1751143718816910. Epub 2018 Dec 5.

Abstract

Background: Studies consistently report deranged sleep in patients admitted to intensive care unit. Poor sleep has harmful physical and cognitive effects, and an evidence-based intervention to improve sleep is needed. It is, however, difficult to measure sleep in the intensive care unit. 'Gold standard' monitoring (polysomnography) is unsuitable for usual care.

Methods: We collected concurrent sleep data from electroencephalograph recordings, activity monitoring, and nurse- and patient-completed Richards-Campbell Sleep Questionnaires (RCSQ).

Results: Electroencephalograph data (n = 34) confirm poor sleep. Individual bouts last approximately 1 min and around 2 h of sleep overnight is common. Correlation between electroencephalograph, self-report, nurse-report, actigraphy and overall activity score is low (ρ = 0.123 (n = 24), 0.127 (n = 22), and 0.402 and - 0.201 (n = 13), respectively). Correlation between nurse and patient assessment is limited (ρ = 0.537 (n = 444)).

Conclusions: No current method of sleep monitoring seems suitable in the intensive care unit. However, to facilitate comparison across studies, the patient-completed RCSQ seems the most meaningful measure.

Keywords: Sleep deprivation; critical care; observational study; polysomnography; sleep monitoring.