Title: Chapter 16: Sleep Disorders
1Chapter 16 Sleep Disorders
2Learning Objectives
- Discuss the importance of sleep to successful
aging. - Describe the potential impact of sleep
disturbance on quality of life in older adults. - Discuss changes in sleep associated with the
normal aging process. - Obtain a basic sleep history, including
identification of risk factors for sleep
disturbance.
3Learning Objectives (contd)
- Use basic and selected specific sleep screening
instruments to assess sleep in older adults. - Discuss common sleep disorders in older adults,
including those associated with geropsychiatric
disorders. - Identify geriatric implications of pharmacologic
interventions for sleep disorders. - Discuss nonpharmacological interventions used in
the management of sleep disorders in older
adults, including cognitive, behavioral, and
complementary alternative therapies.
4Sleep and Quality of Life
- Sleep and the Aging Process
- Bedtime and wake time of older adults earlier
than younger adults - 21 of adults over the age of 65 rated their
- sleep as fair or poor
- Assessment of Sleep
- History
- General survey
- Insomnia
- Daytime sleepiness
5Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disturbance
- Geropsychiatric Disorders and Sleep
- Sleep disturbance is a common problem in older
adults with mental health conditions. - Sleep disturbance in older adults is geriatric
syndrome, often occuring with depression,
anxiety, dementia, and other neurological
disorders such as Parkinsons disease, mental
health conditions, and substance abuse
6Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disturbance
- Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disorders
- Insomnia
- Sleep-related breathing disorders
- Hypersomnias
- Circadian rhythm disorders
- Parasomnias
- Restless legs syndrome
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10Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disturbance
- Sleep Management
- Pharmacologic management of sleep disorders in
older adults is sometimes needed for relief of
symptoms not amenable to nonpharmacologic
methods. (Table 16-2) - Older adults may be more sensitive to side
effects of sleep medications, especially CNS
effects, which may predispose to cognitive
impairment and falls
11Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disturbance
- Sleep Management Medications
- Sedative-hypnotics
- Anti-anxiety
- Hormone
- Sedating antidepressants
- Antihistimines
- Antipsychotics
12Common Sources of Geriatric Sleep Disturbance
- Complementary Alternative Medicine (CAM)
- Acupuncture
- Mind-body modalities Cognitive behavioral tx.
- Biological-based products
- Melatonin shows no significant benefit
- Manipulative and Body-based modalities
- Slow-stroke back and hand massage
- Tai Chi
- Energy fields manipulation of energy, light tx.
- Cranial electrical stimulation
13Nursing Management
- Maintain a regular routine and sleep-wake
schedule every day. - Regular exercise
- Get exposure to natural light for several hours
per day. - Reduce the use of caffeine, alcohol, tobacco,
especially late in the day. - Develop a bedtime routine for each night (read,
watch TV, take a warm bath) - Listening to classical or relaxing music at
bedtime can promote relaxation. - A glass of warm milk
- Reduce noise levels at night
- Use medication as a last resort.
14Question
- At 0300, the nurse finds an elderly hospitalized
client sitting in a chair beside the bed. When
the client says she is unable to sleep, the best
action on the part of the nurse is
Ask about strategies the client has used successfully in the past to fall asleep.
2. Call the physician to obtain an order for a hypnotic.
3. Assist the client back to bed.
4. Provide a glass of warm milk and offer a back rub.
15Summary
- Disturbed sleep has a bidirectional relationship
with disease processes in older adults such as
depression, anxiety, heart disease, hypertension,
and diabetes, and with many medications - Treatment requires holistic approach
- Sleep should routinely assessed and monitored in
older adults