User Compliance and Behavioral Adaptation Associated With Supine Avoidance Therapy.
Daniel J LevendowskiDavid CunningtonJohn SwiecaPhilip WestbrookPublished in: Behavioral sleep medicine (2016)
This study investigates behavioral adaptation to vibrotactile position-avoidance therapy during sleep in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (n =135) across 15 to 52 weeks. The overall compliance, based on nights used ≥ 4 hr, was 71%. Overall regular use, that is, ≥ 4 hr/night over 70% of nights, was 88%. Poor early compliance strongly predicted poor long-term treatment adherence, with 92% of those noncompliant across the first 12 weeks of therapy remaining noncompliant. Conversely, 21% of those with compliant utilization in the short term became noncompliant in the long term. It appears that patients do not habituate to the stimulus during sleep, nor was there a training effect associated with long-term use.
Keyphrases
- obstructive sleep apnea
- end stage renal disease
- sleep quality
- physical activity
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- peritoneal dialysis
- depressive symptoms
- metabolic syndrome
- cell therapy
- skeletal muscle
- bone marrow
- insulin resistance
- positive airway pressure
- patient reported outcomes