1 / 65

Sleep Disorders in the Elderly

Sleep Disorders in the Elderly. Dr motahare mirdamadi psychiatrist. Sound Familiar?. Why am I so tired all of the time? I don’t have any energy… I just can’t sleep well anymore… My husband’s always falling asleep, he doesn’t do anything anymore… I wish I could just get some rest…

jsargent
Download Presentation

Sleep Disorders in the Elderly

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sleep Disorders in the Elderly Dr motahare mirdamadi psychiatrist

  2. Sound Familiar? • Why am I so tired all of the time? • I don’t have any energy… • I just can’t sleep well anymore… • My husband’s always falling asleep, he doesn’t do anything anymore… • I wish I could just get some rest… • I just lie awake, I can’t get back to sleep…

  3. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Physiology: Normal and Aging • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Evaluation for sleep disorders • Insomnia • (Sleep-disordered breathing) • Other sleep disorders

  4. Significance of Sleep Disorders Survey of 9000 people > age 65 • No sleep complaints (12%) • Difficulty initiating/maintaining (43%) • Nocturnal waking (30%) • Insomnia (29%) • Chronic sleep difficulties (>50%) • Daytime napping (25%) • Trouble falling asleep (19%) • Waking too early (19%) • Waking without feeling rested (13%) Ancoli-Israel S. JAGS 2005;53:S264-S271.

  5. Significance of Sleep Disorders • >50% of sedatives are used by people age > 65 • In age 70-100, 19% of patients were taking a sleep medicine (in one study) • Mortality due to common conditions is 2 times higher in elderly with sleep disorders than in those without. • Daytime somnolence can interfere with activities and function • Sleep disorders negatively impact quality of life • Sleep disorders can lead to depression and cognitive impairment

  6. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Physiology: Normal and Aging • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Evaluation for sleep disorders • Insomnia • Sleep-disordered breathing • Other sleep disorders

  7. Normal Physiology - Basics • Non-REM sleep • Stage 1: very light, easy to arouse • Stage 2: most of the night’s sleep • Stage 3,4: slow wave, deeper sleep • REM sleep • EEG similar to stage 1 • Low/absent muscle tone • Dreaming occurs here • Greatest cardiac and respiratory instability

  8. Normal Physiology - Basics • Sleep Architecture • REM latency is about 90 minutes (wide variation) • Very short in narcolepsy • REM normally occurs every 90 to 120 minutes • More stage 3,4 in first half of night, more REM 2nd half • Brief awakenings (30 sec) common, not usually remembered • Brief arousals (3 sec) are normal

  9. Age-Related Changes • Non-REM • Less slow wave sleep (stage 3 and 4), may be entirely absent, easier to awaken • REM • Shorter REM latency • Decreased REM percentage and duration • Architecture • Increased overall sleep latency • More awakenings/arousals = less sleep efficiency • Less sleep in 24 hour period* • Reduced sleep latency during day – harder to stay awake Espiritu JR. Clin Geriatr Med 2008;24:1-14.

  10. Age-Related Changes • Circadian cycle shifted earlier • Decreased melatonin levels at night • Decreased modulation of circadian rhythm between day and night • More naps during the day (1 hour) • May have little impact on night-time sleep • May enhance cognitive and psychomotor performance due to increase total sleep Espiritu JR. Clin Geriatr Med 2008;24:1-14.

  11. Age Related Changes • Less physiologic flexibility with schedule changes • More comorbidities that can interfere with sleep • It is hard to know if sleep problems are more common independent of other conditions • The ability to get restorative sleep gets worse with age, the need for sleep does not.

  12. Mechanisms Underlying Sleep Complaints Vaz Fragoso CA. JAGS 2007;1853-1866.`

  13. Precipitating Factors • Declining Health Status • Nocturia • Pain (DJD, neuropathy) • Cardiac Disease • Angina, CHF, arrhythmia • Pulmonary Disease • Endocrine: thyroid, menopause, DM polyuria

  14. Precipitating Factors • Medications – impact sleep architecture and sleep-disordered breathing • CNS stimulants/depressants • Diuretics, hypoglycemics • Neuropsychological Impairments • Depression, Anxiety • Cognitive Impairment/Psychosis • Primary Sleep Disorders

  15. Perpetuating Factors - Psychosocial • Caregiving • The work of caregiving • Associated mental and physical health problems • Social Isolation • Poorer sleep hygiene • Decline in activity • Bereavement, Widowhood, Retirement

  16. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Physiology: Normal and Aging • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Evaluation for sleep disorders • Insomnia • Sleep-disordered breathing • Other sleep disorders

  17. Primary Sleep Disorders • Primary Insomnia • Sleep onset (Initial) • Sleep maintenance (Middle) • Sleep disordered breathing • Obstructive sleep apnea • Central sleep apnea • Mixed sleep apnea • Circadian rhythm disturbances

  18. Secondary Sleep Disorders • Underlying conditions that should be addressed first • Medical Illness – causing nocturnal symptoms • Psychiatric Illness • Medications • Social/behavioral

  19. Secondary Sleep Disorders • Psychophysiologic Insomnia (stimulus/response) • Adjustment Insomnia – recent stressor • Inadequate Sleep Hygiene • Lack of schedule (retirement!) • Sedentary or naps during daytime • Voluntary sleep deprivation • Mixed-type insomnia

  20. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Normal physiology • Age related changes • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Insomnia • Sleep-disordered breathing • Other sleep disorders

  21. Sleep Hygiene • The bed is for sleeping (and sex) only • Increase activity, decrease naps • Avoid late meals • Avoid caffeine, ETOH, cigarettes • Environmental control (light, noise, temp) • Decrease stress • Establish a routine • Take bath

  22. Polysomnography • Formal Sleep Test – indications • Diagnosis of sleep-disordered breathing • Suspected narcolepsy • Suspected REM sleep movement disorder • Difficult to diagnose parasomnias (e.g. PLMS) • Not usually for: • RLS • Circadian rhythm disorders • Primary insomnia

  23. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Physiology: Normal and Aging • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Evaluation for sleep disorders • Insomnia • Sleep-disordered breathing • Other sleep disorders

  24. Insomnia - Definition • Difficulty with initiation, maintenance, duration, or quality of sleep that results in the impairment of daytime functioning. • Can lead to fatigue, mood disturbance, interpersonal and job problems, and reduced quality of life. From DSM-IV

  25. Insomnia - Definitions • Sleep latency usually > 30 minutes • Sleep efficiency < 85% • Transient: less than 1 week • Short-term: 1-4 weeks • Chronic: > 1 month • May be perpetuated by worrying in bed or unrealistic expectations of sleep duration • More common in women, elderly, and chronic disease (medical and psychiatric)

  26. Insomnia - Treatment • Non-pharmacologic therapy • Improvement in 70-80% of patients (though some studies used psychologists) • Stimulus control therapy – bed for sleeping only, 1 small nap only • Sleep restriction therapy – reduce time in bed to achieve 90% efficiency, gradually increase (up to 6-7 hours) • Relaxation therapy – imagery, meditation, muscle relaxation • Cognitive therapy – beliefs and attitudes • Sleep hygiene education Joshi S. Clin Geriatr Med 2008;24:107-119.

  27. Insomnia - Medications • Use lowest effective dose • Use intermittent dosing • Short term use (< 1 month if possible) • Gradual discontinuation (rebound) • Medications with shorter half lives are preferred to prevent next-day sedation

  28. Insomnia - Medications • Short acting medications • More improvement with sleep latency • More withdrawal and dependence • Long acting • More improvement with sleep duration • More next day symptoms (sedation, cognitive impairment, falls) • Most medications have not been studied extensively in the elderly or more than 6 months

  29. Insomnia - Medications • Benzodiazepines – GABA-A receptors • Benefits: cheap, improve sleep latency, total sleep time, number of awakenings, sleep quality • Disadvantages: • More next day effects (drowsy, dizzy) • More dependency/withdrawal • More rebound symptoms • More amnesia (especially with shorter acting agents) • Falls and hip fracture risk (long acting) Tariq SH. Clin Geriatr Med 2008;24:93-105.

  30. Insomnia - Medications • Benzodiazepine receptor agonists • Advantages • more specific targeting of GABA receptors in the brain – so less side effects • Disadvantages • Not well studied in the elderly (use lower starting doses) • Not compared against each other • More expensive • Dependence/withdrawal still occur • Still can increase risk of falls and fractures

  31. Zolpidem • Short half life (2.6 hours) • Better for sleep onset insomnia • Minimal impact on sleep architecture • Can see rebound insomnia, mild next day drowsiness, mild antergrade amnesia

  32. Zaleplon (Sonata) • Ultrashort half-life (1 hour) • Better for sleep onset insomnia • Can increase total sleep time and efficiency • Can be taken after a middle of night awakening • Rare rebound and next day effects • Not approved for long term use • But reported to be safe for long term use in elderly

  33. Eszopiclone (Lunesta) • Medium half life (5-7 hours) • Better for sleep maintenance insomnia • Increased total sleep time 49 min • Helps with sleep onset (27min) • Few next day effects (but longer half life suggest risk for next day effects in elderly) • Approved for long term use

  34. Sedative-Hypnotics Risk/Benefit • Meta-analysis of 24 studies, > 2400 patients older than age 60 treated with benzo’s or benzo receptor agonists • Benefits – compared to placebo (NNT = 13) • Small improvement in sleep quality • Sleep time increased (25 minutes) • Decrease number of awakenings (0.63) • Harms (NNH = 6) • Cognitive impact (4.78 times more common) • Psychomotor events (2.61 times as common) • Daytime fatigue (3.82 times more common) Glass et al. BMJ 2005;331:1153-1212.

  35. Other Medications • Melatonin receptor agonist • Small improvement in sleep onset (8 min) • Improved total sleep time (12 min) • Increase prolactin levels, few other side effects. • Not compared to other drugs or melatonin. • Approved for chronic use. • Sedating antihistamines

  36. Other Medications • Sedating Antidepressants • Tricyclics: they help, but side effects • Trazadone: helps, not as much as Ambien(zolpidem) • May improve SWS (stage 3 and 4) • Remeron(mirtazapine): increased sleep efficiency, increases duration of slow wave sleep in elderly • These drugs are not well studied (or approved) for insomnia in the elderly • Best used for depression with insomnia

  37. Other Medications - Melatonin • Levels correlate with circadian rhythm • Deficiency is more common in elderly and associated with insomnia • Effects (0.1 to 10mg QHS) • 7.8 minute  latency in primary insomnia • 38.8 minute  latency in delayed sleep phase syndrome • No impact on sleep efficiency • Minimal side effects, if any • Nutritional supplement – dosing? Gooneratne NS. Clin Ger Med 2008;24:121-138.

  38. Drugs vs No Drugs • Unclear if cognitive behavioral therapy or medication therapy is better • Both help • Medications may work more quickly • CBT may have more lasting benefit • Hard to do cognitive therapy • Medications not studied more than 6 months • It is best to attempt education and non-pharmacologic therapy first, and continue even if medications are used

  39. Other Treaments for Insomnia • Bright Light Therapy • Light -> suprachiasmatic nucleus -> inhibits production of melatonin by pineal gland • Threshold between 200-400 lux (normal indoor fluorescent light) • Treatment uses 2000-10,000 lux • Dosing, timing, duration, effectiveness not established in the elderly • Best evidence for SAD in younger people Gammack JK. Clin Geriatr Med 2008;24:139-149.

  40. Agenda • Significance of sleep disorders • Normal physiology • Age related changes • Classifying sleep disorders • Sleep hygiene • Evaluation for sleep disorders • Insomnia • Sleep-disordered breathing • Other sleep disorders

  41. Sleep-disordered Breathing • Usually present with daytime somnolence • Snoring: alone is not usually a problem • Hypopnea • Apnea – increased incidence in the elderly, can be seen in 10-40% • Obstructive • Central • Mixed

  42. Sleep-disordered Breathing • Significance, Signs, and Symptoms • Daytime somnolence, effect on function • Decreased cognition, dementia may be worse • CHF, arrythmias, HTN, cor-pulmonale • Polycythemia • Nocturia • Personality changes • Morning headaches • Decreased libido, impotence • May increase mortality

  43. Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) • Definition: repetitive episodes of uper airway obstruction with continued movement of chest and abdominal walls, leads to desaturations and arousals. • Risk factors: people with classic symptoms and: • Male • Large neck circumference (>18 inches) • Obesity

  44. OSA - Stages • daily sleepiness during tasks that require significant attention (driving, conversation, eating, walking), marked impairment in function

  45. OSA - Treatment • Unclear benefit to treating mild or minimally symptomatic patients • Treatment is likely to improve: • HTN • CHF • Daytime function • Cognition and health-related quality of life

  46. OSA - Treatment • Weight loss, avoid supine position (tennis balls) • Avoid sedating drugs • Prescription drugs not helpful • CPAP/BIPAP – Most efficacious • Compliance issues • Oral appliance – less effective, use for mild cases or if CPAP not tolerated • Surgery – trach, uvuloplasty

  47. Central Sleep Apnea - CSA • Definition – Periodic complete cessation of airflow and respiratory effort, followed by desaturations and arousals. • Related to chemoreceptors and CO2 physiology.

  48. CSA Associated Conditions • Congestive heart failure • Prior Stroke and cerebrovascular disease • Other neurologic disorders – ALS, mucular dystrophy • Chronic renal failure • Hypothyroidism • Baseline CO2 retainers (COPD, kyphoscoliosis)

More Related