Brazilian Journal of Nephrology (Aug 2022)

Self-reported and objective sleep duration in patients with CKD: are they telling the same story?

  • Kalyanna S. Bezerra de Carvalho,
  • Julia C. Lauar,
  • Luciano F. Drager,
  • Rosa M.A. Moyses,
  • Rosilene M. Elias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/2175-8239-jbn-2022-0015en
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 1
pp. 102 – 105

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction: There is disagreement between data on sleep duration obtained from questionnaires and objective measurements. Whether this is also true for individuals with CKD is unknown. Here we compared self-reported sleep duration with sleep duration obtained by actigraphy. Methods: This prospective study included adult individuals with stage 3 CKD recruited between September/2016 and February/2019. We evaluated subjective sleep duration by asking the following question: “How many hours of actual sleep did you get at night?” Results: Patients (N=34) were relatively young (51 ± 13 years). Self-reported and measured sleep duration were 7.1 ± 1.7 and 6.9 ± 1.6 hours, respectively, with no correlation between them (p=0.165). Although the mean difference between measurements was 0.21 h, the limits of agreement ranged from -3.7 to 4.1 h. Conclusion: Patients with CKD who are not on dialysis have an erroneous sleep perception. Data on sleep duration should be preferentially obtained from objective measurements in patients with CKD.

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