Muurlink, OT ORCiD: 0000-0002-8251-9521Intensive care unit patients typically exhibit pathologic wakefulness, poor quality of daytime sleep, nocturnal sleep fragmentation, and sleep patterns that feature the absence of slow wave sleep and rapid eye movement. This article offers a review of the existing literature examining circadian desynchronization in critically ill patients, highlighting contributing factors identified by scholars, and circadian abnormalities observed in these patients. It discusses potential implications for clinical practice and suggests avenues of future research. Elucidating the role of circadian rhythms in the management of critical illness can guide future chronotherapeutic approaches and optimize patient outcomes
Abstract: Disturbed sleep is common in critical illness, not only during early phases of treatment i...
Background: Patients in the ICU are thought to have abnormal circadian rhythms, but quantitative dat...
Data were taken for 5 ICU patients and 5 healthy controls. Study participant ID's are preserved acro...
Intensive care unit patients typically exhibit pathologic wakefulness, poor quality of daytime sleep...
Complex interrelations exist between the master central clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei...
International audienceComplex interrelations exist between the master central clock, located in the ...
Yuliya Boyko,1 Poul Jennum,2 Palle Toft1 1Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Oden...
Abstract This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Em...
Sleep and circadian disruptions are frequently observed in patients across hospital wards. This is a...
ABSTRACT Patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) are known to have highly fragmented sleep, with ...
Background: Circadian deregulation in patients treated in an intensive care unit (ICU) is commonplac...
Purpose of reviewThis article introduces fundamental concepts in circadian biology and the neuroscie...
Abstract A fundamental aspect of human physiology is its cyclical nature over a 24-h period, a featu...
Abstract: Disturbed sleep is common in critical illness, not only during early phases of treatment i...
Background: Patients in the ICU are thought to have abnormal circadian rhythms, but quantitative dat...
Data were taken for 5 ICU patients and 5 healthy controls. Study participant ID's are preserved acro...
Intensive care unit patients typically exhibit pathologic wakefulness, poor quality of daytime sleep...
Complex interrelations exist between the master central clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nuclei...
International audienceComplex interrelations exist between the master central clock, located in the ...
Yuliya Boyko,1 Poul Jennum,2 Palle Toft1 1Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Oden...
Abstract This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Em...
Sleep and circadian disruptions are frequently observed in patients across hospital wards. This is a...
ABSTRACT Patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) are known to have highly fragmented sleep, with ...
Background: Circadian deregulation in patients treated in an intensive care unit (ICU) is commonplac...
Purpose of reviewThis article introduces fundamental concepts in circadian biology and the neuroscie...
Abstract A fundamental aspect of human physiology is its cyclical nature over a 24-h period, a featu...
Abstract: Disturbed sleep is common in critical illness, not only during early phases of treatment i...
Background: Patients in the ICU are thought to have abnormal circadian rhythms, but quantitative dat...
Data were taken for 5 ICU patients and 5 healthy controls. Study participant ID's are preserved acro...