Eyelid Closure Behavior of Patients with Idiopathic and Nonorganic Hypersomnia, Narcolepsy-Cataplexy, and Healthy Controls in the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test.

Santschi, Annelies; Schreier, David R; Hertig-Godeschalk, Anneke; Knobel, Samuel E J; Herrmann, Uli S; Skorucak, Jelena; Schmitt, Wolfgang; Mathis, Johannes (2023). Eyelid Closure Behavior of Patients with Idiopathic and Nonorganic Hypersomnia, Narcolepsy-Cataplexy, and Healthy Controls in the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test. Nature and science of sleep, 15, pp. 677-690. Dove Medical Press 10.2147/NSS.S408318

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PURPOSE

Differential diagnosis of central disorders of hypersomnolence remains challenging, particularly between idiopathic (IH) and nonorganic hypersomnia (NOH). We hypothesized that eyelid closure behavior in the maintenance of wakefulness test (MWT) could be a valuable biomarker.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

MWT recordings of patients with IH, NOH, narcolepsy-cataplexy (NC), and healthy sleep-deprived controls (H) were retrospectively analyzed (15 individuals per group). For each MWT trial, visual scoring of face videography for partial (50-80%) and full eyelid closure (≥80%) was performed from "lights off" to the first microsleep episode (≥3 s).

RESULTS

In all groups, the frequency and cumulative duration of periods with partial and full eyelid closure gradually increased toward the first microsleep episode. On the group level, significant differences occurred for the latency to the first microsleep episode (IH 21 min (18-33), NOH 23 min (17-35), NC 11 min (7-19), H 10 min (6-25); p = 0.009), the ratio between partial and full eyelid closure duration (IH 2.2 (0.9-3.1), NOH 0.5 (0-1.2), NC 2.8 (1.1-5), H 0.7 (0.4-3.3); p = 0.004), and the difference between full and partial eyelid closure duration in the five minutes prior to the first microsleep episode (∆full - partial eyelid closure duration: IH -16 s (-35 to 28); NOH 46 s (9-82); NC -6 s (-26 to 5); H 10 s (-4 to 18); p = 0.007). IH and NOH significantly differed comparing the ratio between partial and full eyelid closure (p = 0.005) and the difference between ∆full - partial eyelid closure duration in the five minutes prior to the first microsleep episode (p = 0.006).

CONCLUSION

In the MWT, eyelid closure behavior (∆full - partial) in the period prior to the first microsleep episode could be of value for discriminating NOH from other etiologies of excessive daytime sleepiness, particularly IH.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > University Psychiatric Services > University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy > Translational Research Center
04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Head Organs and Neurology (DKNS) > Clinic of Neurology

UniBE Contributor:

Schreier, David Raphael, Knobel, Samuel Elia Johannes, Schmitt, Wolfgang, Mathis, Johannes

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1179-1608

Publisher:

Dove Medical Press

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

05 Sep 2023 15:14

Last Modified:

06 Sep 2023 08:32

Publisher DOI:

10.2147/NSS.S408318

PubMed ID:

37621720

Uncontrolled Keywords:

central disorders of hypersomnolence excessive daytime sleepiness hypersomnia hypersomnia associated with psychiatric disorders microsleep vigilance test

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/185747

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/185747

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