Guest guest Posted April 13, 2005 Report Share Posted April 13, 2005 MED: (Female) Volunteers sought for a new clinical study on role of cytokines in sleep (in CFS) > Found this at: http://www.cfids.org/community/bulletin-board.asp > > New clinical study on role of cytokines in sleep > > A group of researchers at the New Jersey Medical School is studying the > role of cytokines in sleep in CFS patients. This three-and-a-half-year > study is funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). > > Principal investigator Natelson, M.D., explains the goal: " One > of the major hypotheses for the cause of CFS is immunological > dysfunction, but no firm data exist to confirm this hypothesis. We > believe this is the case for two reasons: prior researchers have never > studied cytokines during the nighttime, and they have never tried to > understand the role of the cytokines in producing restful or restless > sleep. Many CFS patients have disrupted sleep, and we hypothesize that > this occurs because of abnormalities in the pattern of sleep-disrupting > and sleep-producing cytokines in some patients. " > > Dr. Natelson and his research team are recruiting 80 CFS patients for > the study. All will be women and must be between the ages of 25 and 50. > Women are being studied because CFS is predominantly an illness of > women, because researchers want to exclude subjects with primary sleep > disorders that occur mostly in men, and because women have > substantially higher levels of cytokines than men. > > Participants can't take any brain-active medications at the time of the > study because of their effect on sleep and the immune system. Because > depression alters cytokines, women with depression will be excluded > from the study. Patients will be compensated with $100 per night, but > no travel or lodging expenses are covered. > > CFS patients will be matched by age and gender with 80 healthy > controls. The study will require CFS patients to spend three nights in > the sleep laboratory. The first night is designed to deal with the > well-known " first-night effect " so subjects can become habituated to > the sleep lab. A few days later CFS patients will return for a second > night when researchers will measure sleep-disrupting cytokines and > sleep-producing cytokines. Patients will return again to perform an > exercise test in the afternoon, followed by a third night in the sleep > lab so researchers can test blood to see how exercise perturbs > cytokines. > > " We anticipate that exercise, which is known to exacerbate CFS > symptoms, will worsen an already dysregulated cytokine sleep network, " > explains Dr. Natelson. > > The researchers will study a group of CFS patients who have disrupted > sleep and another group that are found to sleep without disruption. > Like the patients, healthy controls will either sleep without > disruption, or the researchers will disturb their sleep to match them > to CFS patients in the disturbed sleep group. This design will enable > researchers to determine whether the illness (CFS) rather than a > symptom of the illness (disturbed > sleep) is responsible for altered cytokine patterns. > > If you are interested in volunteering for this study, call 973-395-7900 > or send an e-mail to <deleting this to help him avoid getting spam - > click URL at top of E-mail to get it>. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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