Sensory stimulation in the treatment of children with sleep-related rhythmic movement disorder: a feasibility and acceptability study
Sensory stimulation in the treatment of children with sleep-related rhythmic movement disorder: a feasibility and acceptability study
Background
Sleep-related rhythmic movement disorder is characterized by repetitive gross-motor movements at sleep onset or during sleep, which result in clinical consequences such as impact on daytime functioning and injury. No well-established therapies exist today. Substituting the patient’s movements with external sensory stimulation may offer a treatment modality. The aim of the current study was to test the feasibility and acceptability of vestibular stimulation using a rocking bed (Somnomat) in children with rhythmic movement disorder and to assess children’s movement preference.
Methods
Children with rhythmic movement disorder (n = 6, Age: 5–14 years) were studied over three nights in a sleep laboratory: adaptation night (normal bed) and randomised-order baseline (Somnomat) and intervention nights (Somnomat). Child’s preferred movement direction (head-to-toe or side-to-side) and frequency (between 0.25 and 2 Hz), determined during an afternoon protocol, were applied using the Somnomat for 1 h after lights out, and in response to subsequent episodes of rhythmic movement during intervention nights. Comfort assessed using a questionnaire, and objective sleep parameters assessed using videosomnography, were compared.
Results
The participants’ sometimes violent rhythmic movements did not disturb device performance. All children rated intervention nights equally or more comfortable than baseline nights. Self-reported sleep quality, as well as the number and duration of movement episodes did not significantly differ between baseline and intervention nights.
Conclusions
Providing rocking movements using the Somnomat is both technically feasible and acceptable to the target population. The therapeutic value of this novel stimulus substitution for rhythmic movement disorder should now be evaluated in a larger sample over a longer period in the home setting.
van Sluijs, Rachel
06c50e3d-5d79-4af0-aebf-e61bff0d068c
Wilhelm, Elisabeth
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Rondei, Quincy
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Jäger, Lukas
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Gall, Markus
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Garn, Heinrich
5d014add-8e70-40bb-b4d7-c3156e72b7c3
Achermann, Peter
422723f0-03d4-41b9-84f9-06de6b7c3642
Jenni, Oskar G.
810b3f7b-9317-4b64-9190-11571810926e
Reiner, Robert
e95d2b6a-dc5c-4c53-bc8d-b18630abf36a
Hill, Catherine
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
29 July 2020
van Sluijs, Rachel
06c50e3d-5d79-4af0-aebf-e61bff0d068c
Wilhelm, Elisabeth
f47b84a9-b52e-4b71-810f-79106374484b
Rondei, Quincy
12c55922-d7ac-4943-9ebe-b9201d5b3169
Jäger, Lukas
e7e6538c-6b2d-4b76-ad7a-ac09a45111f2
Gall, Markus
3f816846-ad18-45cb-9b43-63bd8d817bb7
Garn, Heinrich
5d014add-8e70-40bb-b4d7-c3156e72b7c3
Achermann, Peter
422723f0-03d4-41b9-84f9-06de6b7c3642
Jenni, Oskar G.
810b3f7b-9317-4b64-9190-11571810926e
Reiner, Robert
e95d2b6a-dc5c-4c53-bc8d-b18630abf36a
Hill, Catherine
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
van Sluijs, Rachel, Wilhelm, Elisabeth, Rondei, Quincy, Jäger, Lukas, Gall, Markus, Garn, Heinrich, Achermann, Peter, Jenni, Oskar G., Reiner, Robert and Hill, Catherine
(2020)
Sensory stimulation in the treatment of children with sleep-related rhythmic movement disorder: a feasibility and acceptability study.
Sleep Science and Practice, 4, [13].
(doi:10.1186/s41606-020-00049-9).
Abstract
Background
Sleep-related rhythmic movement disorder is characterized by repetitive gross-motor movements at sleep onset or during sleep, which result in clinical consequences such as impact on daytime functioning and injury. No well-established therapies exist today. Substituting the patient’s movements with external sensory stimulation may offer a treatment modality. The aim of the current study was to test the feasibility and acceptability of vestibular stimulation using a rocking bed (Somnomat) in children with rhythmic movement disorder and to assess children’s movement preference.
Methods
Children with rhythmic movement disorder (n = 6, Age: 5–14 years) were studied over three nights in a sleep laboratory: adaptation night (normal bed) and randomised-order baseline (Somnomat) and intervention nights (Somnomat). Child’s preferred movement direction (head-to-toe or side-to-side) and frequency (between 0.25 and 2 Hz), determined during an afternoon protocol, were applied using the Somnomat for 1 h after lights out, and in response to subsequent episodes of rhythmic movement during intervention nights. Comfort assessed using a questionnaire, and objective sleep parameters assessed using videosomnography, were compared.
Results
The participants’ sometimes violent rhythmic movements did not disturb device performance. All children rated intervention nights equally or more comfortable than baseline nights. Self-reported sleep quality, as well as the number and duration of movement episodes did not significantly differ between baseline and intervention nights.
Conclusions
Providing rocking movements using the Somnomat is both technically feasible and acceptable to the target population. The therapeutic value of this novel stimulus substitution for rhythmic movement disorder should now be evaluated in a larger sample over a longer period in the home setting.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 July 2020
Published date: 29 July 2020
Additional Information:
Copyright © 2020, The Author(s)
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Local EPrints ID: 468118
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468118
PURE UUID: 1b04301c-dc32-4659-97bc-1415c1c4a2dc
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Date deposited: 02 Aug 2022 17:10
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:48
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Contributors
Author:
Rachel van Sluijs
Author:
Elisabeth Wilhelm
Author:
Quincy Rondei
Author:
Lukas Jäger
Author:
Markus Gall
Author:
Heinrich Garn
Author:
Peter Achermann
Author:
Oskar G. Jenni
Author:
Robert Reiner
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