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The Correlation of Sleep Disturbance and Location of Glioma Tumors: A Narrative Review


Abstract Sleep disturbance can occur when sleep centers of the brain, regions that are responsible for coordinating and generating healthy amounts of sleep, are disrupted by glioma growth or surgical resection. Several disorders cause disruptions to the average duration, quality, or patterns of sleep, resulting in sleep disturbance. It is unknown whether specific sleep disorders can be reliably correlated with glioma growth, but there are sufficient numbers of case reports to suggest that a connection is possible. In this manuscript, these case reports and retrospective chart reviews are considered in the context of the current primary literature on sleep disturbance and glioma diagnosis to identify a new and useful connection which warrants further systematic and scientific examination in preclinical animal models. Confirmation of the relationship between disruption of the sleep centers in the brain and glioma location could have significant implications for diagnostics, treatment, monitoring of metastasis/recurrence, and end-of-life considerations.
Authors JuliAnne E. Allgood University of Wyoming , Avery Roe , Bridger B. Sparks University of Wyoming , M. Castillo ORCID , Angel Cruz , Amanda E. Brooks ORCID , Benjamin Rix Brooks ORCID
Journal Info Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute | Journal of Clinical Medicine , vol: 12 , iss: 12 , pages: 4058 - 4058
Publication Date 6/15/2023
ISSN 2077-0383
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access gold Gold Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12124058
KeywordsKeyword Image Sleep Disruption (Score: 0.585108) , Sleep (Score: 0.524526) , Sleep Quality (Score: 0.509791) , Sleep Duration (Score: 0.50223)