Time-on-task decrements in "steer clear" performance of patients with sleep apnea and narcolepsy

被引:71
作者
Findley, LJ
Suratt, PM
Dinges, DF
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Sch Med, Div Sleep & Chronobiol, Unit Expt Psychiat,Dept Psychiat, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Sch Med, Ctr Sleep & Resp Neurobiol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Univ Virginia, Sch Med, Charlottesville, VA 22908 USA
[4] Sleep Disorders Ctr No Colorado, Loveland, CO USA
关键词
steer clear performance; vigilance; DOES; OSAS; narcolepsy;
D O I
10.1093/sleep/22.6.804
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Loss of attention with time-on-task reflects the increasing instability of the waking state during performance in experimentally induced sleepiness. To determine whether patients with disorders of excessive sleepiness also displayed time-on-task decrements indicative of wake state instability, visual sustained attention performance on "Steer Clear," a computerized simple RT driving simulation task, was compared among 31 patients with untreated sleep apnea, 16 patients with narcolepsy, and 14 healthy central subjects. Vigilance decrement functions were generated by analyzing the number of collisions in each of six four-minute periods of Steer Clear task performance in a mixed-model analysis of variance and linear regression equations. As expected, patients had more Steer Clear collisions than control subjects (p=0.006). However, the inter-subject variability in errors among the narcoleptic patients was four-fold that of the apnea patients, and 100-fold that, of the controls volunteers; the variance in errors among untreated apnea patients was 27-times that of controls. The results of transformed collision data revealed main effects for group (p=0.006), time-on-task (p=0.001), and a significant interaction (p=0.022). Control subjects showed no clear evidence of increasing collision errors with time-on-task (adjusted R2=0.22), while apnea patients showed a trend toward vigilance decrement (adjusted R2=0.42, p=0.097), and narcolepsy patients evidenced a robust linear vigilance decrement (adjusted R2=0.87, p=0.004). The association of disorders of excessive somnolence with escalating time-on-task decrements makes it imperative that when assessment of neurobehavioral performance is conducted in patients, it involves task durations and analyses that will evaluate the underlying vulnerability of potentially sleepy patients to decrements over time in tasks that require sustained attention and timely responses, both of which are key components in safe driving performance.
引用
收藏
页码:804 / 809
页数:6
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