Journal of psychiatric research | 2021

Emotional Behavioural and Autonomic Dysregulation (EBAD) in Rett Syndrome - EDA and HRV monitoring using wearable sensor technology.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nRett syndrome (RTT) is a severe genetic neurodevelopmental disorder. Emotional, Behavioural and Autonomic Dysregulation (EBAD), is frequent in RTT and is associated with multiple impairments. There are major challenges in the clinical assessment of emotions, behaviours, and autonomic function in RTT patients that limit the management of symptoms.\n\n\nMETHODS\nWeb-based technology (HealthTrackerâ„¢) to measure the phenotype, and non-invasive, wearable sensor technology to evaluate autonomic function through Electrodermal Activity (EDA) and Heart Rate Variability (HRV) in 10 RTT patients was used, and treatment response of EBAD symptoms was monitored after different pharmacological treatments.\n\n\nRESULTS\nand discussion: 4 patients received buspirone, 2 sertraline, 1 gabapentin and 3 were not started on medications. Buspirone normalized the EDA in 3 patients with associated improvement in EBAD, whilst another patient only improved marginally. Both patients treated with sertraline (including one with normal EDA) significantly improved symptomatically. The patients on unchanged regimens showed no change in symptoms and autonomic function. Within 24\xa0h of our assessment, one patient required intensive inpatient care due to septicaemia - this patient had been on gabapentin and showed a sharp and sustained EDA increase without obvious worsening of emotional and behavioural symptoms. Unlike the EDA, the analyses of HRV metrics did not reveal patterns that were associated with clinical outcomes. Our findings suggest a reasonable association of EDA normalization and symptomatic improvement in RTT subjects with EBAD treated with buspirone and point out its potential application as a measure of dysautonomia in RTT. Very high and sustained EDA levels may be a biomarker for concurrent serious physical illness in RTT.

Volume 138
Pages \n 186-193\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.03.052
Language English
Journal Journal of psychiatric research

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