Journal of Medical Internet Research (Jul 2022)

Studying the Effect of Long COVID-19 Infection on Sleep Quality Using Wearable Health Devices: Observational Study

  • Mario Mekhael,
  • Chan Ho Lim,
  • Abdel Hadi El Hajjar,
  • Charbel Noujaim,
  • Christopher Pottle,
  • Noor Makan,
  • Lilas Dagher,
  • Yichi Zhang,
  • Nour Chouman,
  • Dan L Li,
  • Tarek Ayoub,
  • Nassir Marrouche

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/38000
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 7
p. e38000

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundPatients with COVID-19 have increased sleep disturbances and decreased sleep quality during and after the infection. The current published literature focuses mainly on qualitative analyses based on surveys and subjective measurements rather than quantitative data. ObjectiveIn this paper, we assessed the long-term effects of COVID-19 through sleep patterns from continuous signals collected via wearable wristbands. MethodsPatients with a history of COVID-19 were compared to a control arm of individuals who never had COVID-19. Baseline demographics were collected for each subject. Linear correlations among the mean duration of each sleep phase and the mean daily biometrics were performed. The average duration for each subject’s total sleep time and sleep phases per night was calculated and compared between the 2 groups. ResultsThis study includes 122 patients with COVID-19 and 588 controls (N=710). Total sleep time was positively correlated with respiratory rate (RR) and oxygen saturation (SpO2). Increased awake sleep phase was correlated with increased heart rate, decreased RR, heart rate variability (HRV), and SpO2. Increased light sleep time was correlated with increased RR and SpO2 in the group with COVID-19. Deep sleep duration was correlated with decreased heart rate as well as increased RR and SpO2. When comparing different sleep phases, patients with long COVID-19 had decreased light sleep (244, SD 67 vs 258, SD 67; P=.003) and decreased deep sleep time (123, SD 66 vs 128, SD 58; P=.02). ConclusionsRegardless of the demographic background and symptom levels, patients with a history of COVID-19 infection demonstrated altered sleep architecture when compared to matched controls. The sleep of patients with COVID-19 was characterized by decreased total sleep and deep sleep.