2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2012.10.019
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Alteration in polysomnographic profile in ‘migraine without aura’ compared to healthy controls

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Cited by 33 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
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“…[76] examined patients suffering from migraine without aura (mean attack frequency 7.4±6.4 attacks/month, mean PSQI score 6.8±3.3), as compared to HC. SE was significantly lower (76.2±13.6 vs 84.7±7.1 %), SOL higher (27.0±23.1 vs 15.1±15.7 min), and stage 4 lower (2.4±3.7 vs 6.2±6.6 %), for migraine subjects compared to HC.…”
Section: Migraine and Tension-type Headachementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…[76] examined patients suffering from migraine without aura (mean attack frequency 7.4±6.4 attacks/month, mean PSQI score 6.8±3.3), as compared to HC. SE was significantly lower (76.2±13.6 vs 84.7±7.1 %), SOL higher (27.0±23.1 vs 15.1±15.7 min), and stage 4 lower (2.4±3.7 vs 6.2±6.6 %), for migraine subjects compared to HC.…”
Section: Migraine and Tension-type Headachementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adaptation night was missing in seven of the studies [37,51,52,68,76,77,85]. This potentially introduces the confounding first-night effect, i.e., disturbance of sleep due to the circumstances of sleeping in a sleep laboratory environment, or being hooked-up to EEG equipment.…”
Section: Adaptation Nightmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patients with migraine tend to have several problems with sleep quality and continuity [7,8]. Studies have also shown that patients with narcolepsy have a significantly higher prevalence of migraine [9] as compared to the general population.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a hospital-based study of thirty migraineurs without aura, Karthnik and colleagues reported that migraineurs had longer latency to sleep onset, less non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep, lower arousal-index, more awakenings, longer time in bed and more awake time as compared with 32 healthy controls (all p-values <0.05) (18). Furthermore, Engstrom et al (27) reported that migraineurs were more likely to endorse subjective sleep problems (in response to the PSQI) and to have poor sleep quality (measured objectively using the PSG methodology.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%