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The Anti-snoring Bed

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Snoring
Interventions
Device: Anti-snoring bed
Registration Number
NCT04053738
Lead Sponsor
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Brief Summary

Habitual snoring is a widespread complication. Most snorers snore predominately when sleeping in supine position. Therefore, therapeutic interventions force snorers to avoid supine position. Devices that restrict the sleeping position or raise alarms when the user obtains the supine position cause discomfort or disrupt sleep resulting in low compliance. Therefore, anti-snoring mechanisms, which lift the trunk of the user without disturbing sleep, have been proposed.

We set out to investigate whether individual interventions provided by beds with lifting mechanisms are able to stop snoring within three minutes (success rate) and whether the bed reduces the snoring index (number of total snores divided by total time in bed). In addition, we investigat whether the trunk elevation provided by the bed is interfering with the subjective sleep quality assessed using the Groningen Sleep Quality Score.

Subjects are observed for four nights (adaptation, baseline, and two intervention nights). During intervention nights, the bed lifts the trunk of the user in closed-loop manner. Subjects are divided in three groups (non-snorers, snorer group one, and snorer group two). Non-snorers are lifted by the bed at random time points during the night. In snorer group one, a stepwise increase of the bed inclination is compared with going directly to a randomly selected angle. In snorer group two, the influence of a small inclination angle (10°) and a big inclination angle (20°) is compared..

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
22
Inclusion Criteria
  • none
Exclusion Criteria
  • Pregnancy
  • Previously diagnosed sleep-related breathing disorders
  • Chronic lower back pain
  • Heart insufficiency that might impede sleeping in supine position
  • Inability to follow the procedures of the study, e.g. due to language problems

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Anti-snoring InterventionAnti-snoring bedParticipants slept in the anti-snoring bed in the laboratory, and the bed moved the trunk of the participant
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Effect on snoringwhole night - 4 nights

Number of episodes of snoring that are terminated by intervention.

Snoring activity was monitored using a portable home-monitoring device (Apnea Link plus, purchased from ResMed, Switzerland). This device records oxygen saturation, nasal airflow, and breathing effort. The device comes with a software package that automatically scores the data according to the sleep scoring rules of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM). Since audio based detection has been reported to be the most reliable way of snoring detection , we also used a sound level meter (XL2 Audio and acoustic Analyzer, purchased from NTi Audio, Lichtenstein) for manual visual-audio scoring of snoring sound. The sound level meter was placed approximately in the position where you would usually expect the head of the bed partner. Manual visual-audio scoring of the data collected with the noise level meter was performed using the XL2 data explorer.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-Reported Sleep Qualityupon awakening - 4 nights

Subjective Sleep Quality was assessed using the standardized Groningen Sleep Quality Scale (GSQS). This questionnaire consists of 15 questions, which are to be answered with yes or no. The maximum possible score of 14 indicates a poor sleep the preceding night. Within the study, we used the original English version of the questionnaire.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Sensory-Motor Systems Lab, ETH Zurich

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Zurich, Switzerland

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