TY - JOUR
T1 - Proceedings of the Sleep and Epilepsy Workshop
T2 - Section 1 Decreasing Seizures: Improving Sleep and Seizures, Themes for Future Research
AU - Quigg, Mark
AU - Bazil, Carl W.
AU - Boly, Melanie
AU - Louis, Erik St
AU - Liu, Judy
AU - Ptacek, Louis
AU - Maganti, Rama
AU - Kalume, Frank
AU - Gluckman, Bruce J.
AU - Pathmanathan, Jay
AU - Pavlova, Milena K.
AU - Buchanan, Gordon F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Epileptic seizures, sleep, and circadian timing share bilateral interactions, but concerted work to characterize these interactions and to leverage them to the advantage of patients with epilepsy remains in beginning stages. To further the field, a multidisciplinary group of sleep physicians, epileptologists, circadian timing experts, and others met to outline the state of the art, gaps of knowledge, and suggest ways forward in clinical, translational, and basic research. A multidisciplinary panel of experts discussed these interactions, centered on whether improvements in sleep or circadian rhythms improve decrease seizure frequency. In addition, education about sleep was lacking in among patients, their families, and physicians, and that focus on education was an extremely important “low hanging fruit” to harvest. Improvements in monitoring technology, experimental designs sensitive to the rigor required to dissect sleep versus circadian influences, and clinical trials in seizure reduction with sleep improvements were appropriate.
AB - Epileptic seizures, sleep, and circadian timing share bilateral interactions, but concerted work to characterize these interactions and to leverage them to the advantage of patients with epilepsy remains in beginning stages. To further the field, a multidisciplinary group of sleep physicians, epileptologists, circadian timing experts, and others met to outline the state of the art, gaps of knowledge, and suggest ways forward in clinical, translational, and basic research. A multidisciplinary panel of experts discussed these interactions, centered on whether improvements in sleep or circadian rhythms improve decrease seizure frequency. In addition, education about sleep was lacking in among patients, their families, and physicians, and that focus on education was an extremely important “low hanging fruit” to harvest. Improvements in monitoring technology, experimental designs sensitive to the rigor required to dissect sleep versus circadian influences, and clinical trials in seizure reduction with sleep improvements were appropriate.
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U2 - 10.1177/15357597211004566
DO - 10.1177/15357597211004566
M3 - Article
C2 - 33787387
AN - SCOPUS:85103828002
SN - 1535-7597
VL - 21
SP - 204
EP - 209
JO - Epilepsy Currents
JF - Epilepsy Currents
IS - 3
ER -