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Agreement Between Actigraphy and Diary‐Recorded Measures of Sleep in Children With Epilepsy
Author(s) -
Tsai ShaoYu,
Lee WangTso,
Lee ChienChang,
Jeng SuhFang,
Weng WenChin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of nursing scholarship
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.009
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1547-5069
pISSN - 1527-6546
DOI - 10.1111/jnu.12364
Subject(s) - actigraphy , sleep (system call) , sleep onset , sleep onset latency , sleep diary , epilepsy , medicine , physical therapy , audiology , psychology , insomnia , psychiatry , computer science , operating system
Abstract Purpose To describe sleep patterns in young children with epilepsy and to examine levels of agreement between measurements derived from actigraphy and diary recordings. Design Cross‐sectional study. Methods Eighty‐nine toddlers and preschool‐aged children with epilepsy wore an actigraph on their wrists for 7 consecutive days. Parents and caregivers maintained a concurrent sleep diary while the child was wearing the monitor. Levels of agreement between actigraphy and diary recordings were examined using the Bland and Altman method separately for all recording days, weekdays, and weekends. Findings Discrepancies between actigraphy‐derived and diary‐documented sleep onset, sleep offset, actual sleep at night, wake after sleep onset, and daytime sleep were ±35, ±15, ±82, ±70, and ±29 min, respectively. Differences between actigraphy and diary‐derived sleep variables were consistently greater for weekends than for weekdays. Discrepancies between actigraphy and diary‐derived actual sleep at night were significantly greater for children who slept alone than for those who co‐slept with a parent. Conclusions Our study demonstrates an acceptable agreement between actigraphy and diary recordings for sleep onset, sleep offset, and daytime sleep, but insufficient agreement for actual sleep at night and wake after sleep onset, with parents of children sleeping alone more likely to misestimate child sleep behaviors. Deviation of weekend sleep from weekdays further decreased the accuracy of parental sleep estimates and increased the discrepancies between actigraphy and diary. Clinical Relevance Sleep in children with epilepsy assessed using diary recordings alone could be misleading, and actigraphy should be preferred over diaries when resources are available.

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