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Assessing sleep using hip and wrist actigraphy
Author(s) -
Slater James A,
Botsis Thalia,
Walsh Jennifer,
King Stuart,
Straker Leon M,
Eastwood Peter R
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
sleep and biological rhythms
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.371
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1479-8425
pISSN - 1446-9235
DOI - 10.1111/sbr.12103
Subject(s) - actigraphy , neurology , human physiology , physical medicine and rehabilitation , sleep (system call) , wrist , medicine , health psychology , physical therapy , psychology , public health , psychiatry , computer science , insomnia , nursing , surgery , operating system
Wrist actigraphy is commonly used to measure sleep, and hip actigraphy is commonly used to measure activity. It is unclear whether hip‐based actigraphy can be used to measure sleep. This study assessed the validity of wrist actigraphy and hip actigraphy compared to polysomnography ( PSG ) for the measurement of sleep. 108 healthy young adults (22.7 ± 0.2 years) wore hip and wrist GTX 3+ A ctigraph during overnight PSG . Measurements of total sleep time ( TST ), sleep efficiency ( SE ), sleep onset latency ( SOL ) and wake after sleep onset ( WASO ) were derived and compared between wrist actigraphy, hip actigraphy and PSG . Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of wrist actigraphy and hip actigraphy for each variable were derived from epoch‐by‐epoch comparison to PSG . Compared to PSG : TST and SE were similar by wrist actigraphy but overestimated by hip actigraphy (both by 14%); SOL was underestimated by wrist actigraphy and hip actigraphy (by 39 and 80%, respectively); WASO was overestimated by wrist actigraphy and underestimated by hip actigraphy (by 34 and 65%, respectively). Compared to PSG the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of wrist actigraphy were 90, 46 and 84%, respectively; and of hip actigraphy were 99, 14 and 86%, respectively. This study showed that using existing algorithms, a GTX3 + Actigraph worn on the hip does not provide valid or accurate measures of sleep, mainly due to poor wake detection. Relative to the hip, a wrist worn GTX 3+ Actigraph provided more valid measures of sleep, but with only moderate capability to detect periods of wake during the sleep period.

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