Sleep study

Medical recording of sleep activity


title: "Sleep study" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["sleep"] description: "Medical recording of sleep activity" topic_path: "general/sleep" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_study" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Medical recording of sleep activity ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f6/Room_for_sleep_studies_-_NÄL_hospital.jpg" caption="multiple sleep latency tests]], maintenance of wakefulness tests, and home sleep tests. In medicine, sleep studies have been useful in identifying and ruling out various [[sleep disorder]]s. Sleep studies have also been valuable to psychology, in which they have provided insight into brain activity and the other physiological factors of both sleep disorders and normal sleep. This has allowed further research to be done on the relationship between sleep and behavioral and psychological factors."] ::

Utility

Depending on the method being used, sleep studies can help diagnose or rule out the following disorders:

  • Sleep-related breathing disorders, such as sleep apnea
  • Sleep-related seizure disorders
  • Sleep-related movement disorders, such as periodic limb movement disorder, which is repeated muscle twitching of the feet, legs, or arms during sleep. Sleep studies may be used to diagnose or rule out restless legs syndrome. However, this syndrome usually is diagnosed based on signs and symptoms, medical history, and a physical exam.
  • Problems sleeping at night (insomnia): caused by stress, depression, hunger, physical discomfort, or other problem.
  • Sleep disorders that cause extreme daytime tiredness, such as narcolepsy or circadian rhythm sleep disorders.
  • Problems with nighttime behaviors, such as sleepwalking, night terrors, or bed-wetting
  • Sleep bruxism (grinding of the teeth during sleep)
  • Problems sleeping during the day because of working at night or rotating shift work. This sleep problem is called shift work sleep disorder.
  • Sleep studies can also determine problems with stages of sleep. The two primary categories of sleep are non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid eye movement sleep. Normally, four to five series of non-rapid eye movement sleep and rapid eye movement sleep make up a night's sleep. A change in this cycle may make it hard to sleep soundly.

Types

The most common sleep studies are:

Polysomnogram

Polysomnography records several body functions during sleep, including brain activity, eye movement, oxygen and carbon dioxide blood levels, heart rate and rhythm, breathing rate and rhythm, the flow of air through the mouth and nose, snoring, body muscle movements, and chest and belly movement. These tests are typically done at night in a hospital or sleep center. Polysomnogram tests can give insight into what issue is occurring.

Multiple sleep latency test

The multiple sleep latency test measures, by several (four) nap opportunities in one day, how long it takes a person to fall asleep. It also determines whether rapid eye movement sleep sleep appears upon falling asleep. It is usually performed immediately after an overnight study. This test is the standard to test for narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia.

Maintenance of wakefulness test

This test measures whether a person can stay awake during a time when she or he is normally awake. Like the multiple sleep latency tests, the maintenance of wakefulness test is performed in a sleep diagnostic center over 4–5 nap periods. A mean sleep onset latency of less than 10 minutes is suggestive of excessive daytime sleepiness.

Home sleep test

These typically include the individual whose sleep is being studied receiving a portable monitor and may include other items such as a finger clip and an airflow sensor. Items measured include oxygen saturation, heart rate, airflow, body movement, time spent snoring, sleep position, and brain waves.

A home sleep apnea test allows calculation of apnea-hypopnea index and respiratory disturbance index and differentiation between primary snoring and obstructive sleep apnea.

Sleep questionnaires

Sleep study in psychology

Sleep studies have been imperative for the empirical research of sleep psychology. The area of sleep psychology evaluates the physiological, and behavioral factors of normal sleep and sleep disorders along with the neuroscience and brain-wave activity associated with sleep, as well as the study of circadian rhythms.

Administers of sleep studies

Sleep Specialists are doctors that are board certified in sleep medicine. Doctors qualified to order a sleep study include:

  • Primary care physician: A doctor who provides first contact for a person with a health concern.
  • Sleep specialists: Board-certified sleep medicine doctors have undergone special training and testing to ensure they can diagnose all sleep-related disorders, including sleep apnea.
  • Neurologist: The neurologist treats disorders that affect the brain, spinal cord, and nerves.
  • Psychiatrists: A medical practitioner specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness.
  • Pulmonologists: A medical practitioner specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of lung and breathing disorders.

References

References

  1. "Sleep Studies".
  2. "Sleep Disorder Diagnosis Through a Sleep Study".
  3. "Polysomnography (sleep study) - Mayo Clinic".
  4. Goddard, John. (March 2021). "Multiple Sleep Latency Test: when are 4 naps enough?". Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
  5. Littner, Michael R.. (January 2005). "Practice Parameters for Clinical Use of the Multiple Sleep Latency Test and the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test". Sleep.
  6. "Medicaid Policies".
  7. "Multiple Sleep Latency Test - Overview and Facts".
  8. Bijlenga, Denise. (2022-08-11). "Usefulness of the maintenance of wakefulness test in central disorders of hypersomnolence: a scoping review". Sleep.
  9. "Do At Home Sleep Studies Really Work".
  10. (October 2024). "Management of primary snoring in adults: A scoping review examining interventions, outcomes and instruments used to assess clinical effects.". Sleep Medicine Reviews.
  11. (September 2005). "The Tayside children's sleep questionnaire: a simple tool to evaluate sleep problems in young children". Child: Care, Health and Development.
  12. "Tayside Children's Sleep Questionnaire (TCSQ)".
  13. (2022-08-24). "Reliability, validity, and psychometric properties of the Persian version of the Tayside children's sleep questionnaire". Sleep and Biological Rhythms.
  14. (2015-07-01). "Validity and reliability related to the Persian version of the Children's Sleep Habits Questionnaire". Sleep and Biological Rhythms.
  15. (2020-07-01). "Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire (CASQ): a translation and validation study of the Persian version". Sleep and Biological Rhythms.
  16. "Sleep Psychology".
  17. [[Primary care physician]]
  18. "What Is a Sleep Specialist?".
  19. [https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/highland/departments-centers/neurology/what-is-a-neurologist.aspx]"What is a Neurologist?"
  20. [https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=5107]"Medical Definition of Psychiatrist"

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