Abstract

Sleep quality and duration as well as activity-rest-cycles at individual level are crucial for maintaining physical and mental health. Although several methods do exist to monitor these parameters, optimal approaches are still under consideration and technological development. Wrist actigraphy is a non-invasive electro-physical method validated in the field of chronobiology to record movements and to allow for monitoring human activity-rest-cycles. Based on the continuous recording of motor activity and light exposure, actigraphy provides valuable information about the quality and quantity of the sleep–wake rhythm and about the amount of motor activity at day and night that is highly relevant for predicting a potential disease and its targeted prevention as well as personalisation of medical services provided to individuals in suboptimal health conditions and patients. Being generally used in the field of sleep medicine, actigraphy demonstrates a great potential to be successfully implemented in primary, secondary and tertiary care, psychiatry, oncology, and intensive care, military and sports medicines as well as epidemiological monitoring of behavioural habits as well as well-being medical support, amongst others.Prediction of disease development and individual outcomesActivity-rest-cycles have been demonstrated to be an important predictor for many diseases including but not restricted to the development of metabolic, psychiatric and malignant pathologies. Moreover, activity-rest-cycles directly impact individual outcomes in corresponding patient cohorts.Targeted preventionData acquired by actigraphy are instrumental for the evidence-based targeted prevention by analysing individualised patient profiles including light exposure, sleep duration and quality, activity-rest-cycles, intensity and structure of motion pattern.Personalised therapyWrist actigraphic approach is increasingly used in clinical care. Personalised measurements of sedation/agitation rhythms are useful for ICU patients, for evaluation of motor fatigue in oncologic patients, for an individual enhancement of performance in military and sport medicine. In the framework of personalised therapy intervention, patients can be encouraged to optimise their behavioural habits improving recovery and activity patterns. This opens excellent perspectives for the sleep-inducing medication and stimulants replacement as well as for increasing the role of participatory medicine by visualising and encouraging optimal behavioural patterns of the individual.

Highlights

  • The use of actigraphy is recommended in the following sleep disorders or circadian rhythm sleep–wake disorders [25]:

  • The authors found a strong correlation between the sedation/agitation levels and the actigraphy data and concluded that actigraphy may have the potential to be used as a tool for automated objective real-time monitoring of sedation/agitation levels for patients in intensive care unit (ICU) [61]

  • The severity of sleep–wake rhythm disorders is related to the severity of neuropsychological dysfunction in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) [68], and it is widely accepted that sleep problems are common amongst patients suffering from the MCI [69]

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Summary

Introduction

Sleep quality and duration are crucial for maintaining physical and mental health [1, 2] as well as for individual outcomes in a spectrum of suboptimal health conditions,. Individualised sleep quality monitoring is essential to analyse individual sleep patterns, to predict sleep disorders and associated pathologies followed by targeted prevention and treatments tailored to the personalised patient profile [9, 11,12,13,14]. This approach is conform with principles of predictive, preventive and personalised medicine (PPPM/3PM) [15]. With the increasing availability of inexpensive actigraphy in wearables, promising applications are opening in the field of sleep medicine and in predictive, preventive and personalised medicine These will be presented and discussed in the following

Increasing recognition of actigraphy in the field of sleep medicine
An issue of reimbursement for the clinical implementation of actigraphy
Actigraphy application in the broader focus of sleep medicine
Actigraphy is instrumental to quantify sleep duration
Insufficient sleep duration and circadian rhythm disruption
Discriminating between sleepiness and fatigue
Actigraphy application opportunities beyond the sleep medicine
Dementia and MCI
Monitoring activity to estimate energy expenditure
Military medicine
Barriers in producing certified devices
Tertiary care
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