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The effect of bright light therapy on sleep and circadian rhythms in renal transplant recipients: a pilot randomized, multicentre wait-list controlled trial
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4026301
Author(s) Burkhalter, Hanna; Wirz-Justice, Anna; Denhaerynck, Kris; Fehr, Thomas; Steiger, Jürg; Venzin, Reto Martin; Cajochen, Christian; Weaver, Terri Elisabeth; De Geest, Sabina
Author(s) at UniBasel De Geest, Sabina M.
Denhaerynck, Kris
Year 2015
Title The effect of bright light therapy on sleep and circadian rhythms in renal transplant recipients: a pilot randomized, multicentre wait-list controlled trial
Journal Transplant International
Volume 28
Number 1
Pages / Article-Number 59-70
Keywords bright light therapy, randomized controlled trial, renal transplantation
Abstract This study assessed the effect and feasibility of morning bright light therapy (BLT) on sleep, circadian rhythms, subjective feelings, depressive symptomatology and cognition in renal transplant recipients (RTx) diagnosed with sleep-wake disturbances (SWD). This pilot randomized multicentre wait-list controlled trial included 30 home-dwelling RTx randomly assigned 1:1 to either 3 weeks of BLT or a wait-list control group. Morning BLT (10 000 lux) was individually scheduled for 30 min daily for 3 weeks. Wrist actimetry (measuring sleep and circadian rhythms), validated instruments (subjective feelings and cognition) and melatonin assay (circadian timing) were used. Data were analysed via a random-intercept regression model. Of 30 RTx recipients (aged 58 ± 15, transplanted 15 ± 6 years ago), 26 completed the study. While BLT had no significant effect on circadian and sleep measures, sleep timing improved significantly. The intervention group showed a significant get-up time phase advance from baseline to intervention (+24 min) [(standardized estimates (SE): -0.23 (-0.42; -0.03)] and a small (+14 min) but significant bedtime phase advance from intervention to follow-up (SE: -0.25 (-0.41; -0.09). Improvement in subjective feelings and depressive symptomatology was observed but was not statistically significant. Bright light therapy showed preliminary indications of a beneficial effect in RTx with sleep-wake disturbances. (ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT01256983).
Publisher Wiley
ISSN/ISBN 0934-0874 ; 1432-2277
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/57383/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1111/tri.12443
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25182079
ISI-Number WOS:000346066500008
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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