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Dive into the research topics where Silvia Parapatics is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvia Parapatics.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Sleep spindle-related activity in the human EEG and its relation to general cognitive and learning abilities.

Manuel Schabus; K. Hödlmoser; Georg Gruber; Cornelia Sauter; Peter Anderer; Gerhard Klösch; Silvia Parapatics; Bernd Saletu; Wolfgang Klimesch; Josef Zeitlhofer

Stage 2 sleep spindles have been previously viewed as useful markers for the development and integrity of the CNS and were more currently linked to ‘offline re‐processing’ of implicit as well as explicit memory traces. Additionally, it had been discussed if spindles might be related to a more general learning or cognitive ability. In the present multicentre study we examined the relationship of automatically detected slow (< 13 Hz) and fast (> 13 Hz) stage 2 sleep spindles with: (i) the Ravens Advanced Progressive Matrices (testing ‘general cognitive ability’); as well as (ii) the Wechsler Memory scale‐revised (evaluating memory in various subdomains). Forty‐eight healthy subjects slept three times (separated by 1 week) for a whole night in a sleep laboratory with complete polysomnographic montage. Whereas the first night only served adaptation and screening purposes, the two remaining nights were preceded either by an implicit mirror‐tracing or an explicit word‐pair association learning or (corresponding) control task. Robust relationships of slow and fast sleep spindles with both cognitive as well as memory abilities were found irrespectively of whether learning occurred before sleep. Based on the present findings we suggest that besides being involved in shaping neuronal networks after learning, sleep spindles do reflect important aspects of efficient cortical‐subcortical connectivity, and are thereby linked to cognitive‐ and memory‐related abilities alike.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2009

Interrater reliability for sleep scoring according to the Rechtschaffen & Kales and the new AASM standard

Heidi Danker-Hopfe; Peter Anderer; Josef Zeitlhofer; Marion Boeck; Hans Dorn; Georg Gruber; Esther Heller; Erna Loretz; Doris Moser; Silvia Parapatics; Bernd Saletu; Andrea Schmidt; Georg Dorffner

Interrater variability of sleep stage scorings has an essential impact not only on the reading of polysomnographic sleep studies (PSGs) for clinical trials but also on the evaluation of patients’ sleep. With the introduction of a new standard for sleep stage scorings (AASM standard) there is a need for studies on interrater reliability (IRR). The SIESTA database resulting from an EU‐funded project provides a large number of studies (n = 72; 56 healthy controls and 16 subjects with different sleep disorders, mean age ± SD: 57.7 ± 18.7, 34 females) for which scorings according to both standards (AASM and R&K) were done. Differences in IRR were analysed at two levels: (1) based on quantitative sleep parameter by means of intraclass correlations; and (2) based on an epoch‐by‐epoch comparison by means of Cohen’s kappa and Fleiss’ kappa. The overall agreement was for the AASM standard 82.0% (Cohen’s kappa = 0.76) and for the R&K standard 80.6% (Cohen’s kappa = 0.68). Agreements increased from R&K to AASM for all sleep stages, except N2. The results of this study underline that the modification of the scoring rules improve IRR as a result of the integration of occipital, central and frontal leads on the one hand, but decline IRR on the other hand specifically for N2, due to the new rule that cortical arousals with or without concurrent increase in submental electromyogram are critical events for the end of N2.


Neuroreport | 2008

Is there a link between sleep changes and memory in Alzheimer's disease?

Géraldine Rauchs; Manuel Schabus; Silvia Parapatics; Françoise Bertran; Patrice Clochon; Pascal Hot; Pierre Denise; Béatrice Desgranges; Francis Eustache; Georg Gruber; Peter Anderer

Aging and Alzheimers disease (AD) are both characterized by memory impairments and sleep changes. We investigated the potential link between these disturbances, focusing on sleep spindles, involved in memory consolidation. Two episodic memory tasks were given to young and old healthy participants, as well as to AD patients. Postlearning sleep was recorded. Sleep spindles were globally reduced in aging and AD. AD patients also exhibited a further decrease in fast spindles. Besides, mean intensity of fast spindles was positively correlated, in AD patients, with immediate recall performance. Our results are the first report of a specific decrease in fast spindles in AD, associated with learning abilities. They also give further hints for a functional differentiation between slow and fast spindles.


Neuropsychobiology | 2005

On the Pharmacotherapy of Sleep Bruxism: Placebo-Controlled Polysomnographic and Psychometric Studies with Clonazepam

Alexander Saletu; Silvia Parapatics; Bernd Saletu; Peter Anderer; Wolfgang Prause; Hanna Putz; Josef Adelbauer; Gerda Maria Saletu-Zyhlarz

Objectives: Sleep bruxism (SB) is a parasomnia defined as a stereotyped movement disorder characterized by grinding or clenching of the teeth during sleep. Pathophysiologically, SB is the result of biological and psychosocial influences. Treatment comprises behavioral, orthodontic and pharmacological interventions. While benzodiazepines and muscle relaxants have been reported by clinicians to reduce bruxism-related motor activity, placebo-controlled studies are lacking. Thus, the aim of the present study was to investigate the acute effects of clonazepam (Rivotril®) as compared with placebo, utilizing polysomnography and psychometry. Method: Ten drug-free outpatients (6 females, 4 males), aged 46.5 ± 13.1 years, suffering from SB (ICD-10: F45.8; ICSD: 306.8) and having been treated by bite splints were included in the trial. Comorbidity was high: 7 patients presented nonorganic insomnia related to adjustment or anxiety disorders (5 patients) or depression (2 patients); all patients had a concomitant movement disorder (6 restless legs syndrome, 4 periodic leg movement disorder). After one adaptation night, patients received placebo and 1 mg clonazepam 1/2 hour before lights out in a single-blind, nonrandomized study design. Objective sleep quality was determined by polysomnography, subjective sleep and awakening quality by rating scales, objective awakening quality by psychometric tests. Clinical evaluation was based on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Zung Depression (SDS) and Anxiety (SAS) Scales, the Quality of Life Index, the Epworth Sleepiness Scale and the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group (IRLSSG) Scale. Results: On admission, SB patients exhibited deteriorated PSQI, SAS, SDS and IRLSSG measures. As compared with placebo, 1 mg clonazepam significantly improved the mean bruxism index from 9.3 to 6.3/h of sleep. Furthermore, it significantly improved the total sleep period, total sleep time, sleep efficiency, sleep latency and time awake during the total sleep period, and increased stage 2 sleep and movement time. Periodic leg movements decreased significantly, while the apnea index and apnea-hypopnea index increased marginally, but remained within normal limits. Subjective sleep quality improved as well, while in mood, performance and psychophysiology no changes were observed. Conclusion: Acute clonazepam therapy significantly improved not only the bruxism index but also objective and subjective sleep quality, with unchanged mood, performance and psychophysiological measures upon awakening, suggesting good tolerability of the drug.


Neuropsychobiology | 2010

Computer-assisted sleep classification according to the standard of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine: validation study of the AASM version of the Somnolyzer 24 × 7.

Peter Anderer; Arnaud Moreau; Michael Woertz; Marco Ross; Georg Gruber; Silvia Parapatics; Erna Loretz; Esther Heller; Andrea Schmidt; Marion Boeck; Doris Moser; Gerhard Kloesch; Bernd Saletu; Gerda Maria Saletu-Zyhlarz; Heidi Danker-Hopfe; Josef Zeitlhofer; Georg Dorffner

Background: In 2007, the AASM Manual for the Scoring of Sleep and Associated Events was published by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM). Concerning the visual classification of sleep stages, these new rules are intended to replace the rules by Rechtschaffen and Kales (R&K). Methods: We adapted the automatic R&K sleep scoring system Somnolyzer 24 × 7 to comply with the AASM rules and subsequently performed a validation study based on 72 polysomnographies from the Siesta database (56 healthy subjects, 16 patients, 38 females, 34 males, aged 21–86 years). Scorings according to the AASM rules were performed manually by experienced sleep scorers and semi-automatically by the AASM version of the Somnolyzer. Manual scorings and Somnolyzer reviews were performed independently by at least 2 out of 8 experts from 4 sleep centers. Results: In the quality control process, sleep experts corrected 4.8 and 3.7% of the automatically assigned epochs, resulting in a reliability between 2 Somnolyzer-assisted scorings of 99% (Cohen’s kappa: 0.99). In contrast, the reliability between the 2 manual scorings was 82% (kappa: 0.76). The agreement between the 2 Somnolyzer-assisted and the 2 visual scorings was between 81% (kappa: 0.75) and 82% (kappa: 0.76). Conclusion: The AASM version of the Somnolyzer revealed an agreement between semi-automated and human expert scoring comparable to that published for the R&K version with a validity comparable to that of human experts, but with a reliability close to 1, thereby reducing interrater variability as well as scoring time to a minimum.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2013

Sleep in the Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome and Minimally Conscious State

Victor Cologan; Xavier Drouot; Silvia Parapatics; Arnaud Delorme; Georg Gruber; Gustave Moonen; Steven Laureys

The goal of our study was to investigate different aspects of sleep, namely the sleep-wake cycle and sleep stages, in the vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS). A 24-h polysomnography was performed in 20 patients who were in a UWS (n=10) or in a MCS (n=10) because of brain injury. The data were first tested for the presence of a sleep-wake cycle, and the observed sleep patterns were compared with standard scoring criteria. Sleep spindles, slow wave sleep, and rapid eye movement sleep were quantified and their clinical value was investigated. According to our results, an electrophysiological sleep-wake cycle was identified in five MCS and three VS/UWS patients. Sleep stages did not always match the standard scoring criteria, which therefore needed to be adapted. Sleep spindles were present more in patients who clinically improved within 6 months. Slow wave sleep was present in eight MCS and three VS/UWS patients but never in the ischemic etiology. Rapid eye movement sleep, and therefore dreaming that is a form of consciousness, was present in all MCS and three VS/UWS patients. In conclusion, the presence of alternating periods of eyes-open/eyes-closed cycles does not necessarily imply preserved electrophysiological sleep architecture in the UWS and MCS, contrary to previous definition. The investigation of sleep is a little studied yet simple and informative way to evaluate the integrity of residual brain function in patients with disorders of consciousness with possible clinical diagnostic and prognostic implications.


Neuropsychobiology | 2007

Effects of a mandibular repositioning appliance on sleep structure, morning behavior and clinical symptomatology in patients with snoring and sleep-disordered breathing.

A. Saletu; Peter Anderer; Silvia Parapatics; C. Matthai; M. Matejka; Bernd Saletu

Background: Mandibular repositioning appliances (MRAs) have become an established treatment for snoring and sleep-disordered breathing – though most studies only focused on the evaluation of respiratory variables. Methods: This single-blind, placebo-controlled case-series study investigated the effects of an individually adjustable MRA on psychopathology, macro-/microstructure of sleep, periodic leg movements, morning performance, mood/affect and psychophysiology. Fifty patients (37 males) aged 59.7 ± 10.3 years, suffering from primary snoring (7), mild (22), moderate (15) and severe apnea (6), spent 4 nights in the sleep laboratory (adaptation, placebo, drug and MRA night). The drug night is not subject of the present paper. Results: Confirmatory statistics showed an improvement of the snoring index by 72%. Descriptively, the apnea index and the apnea-hypopnea index normalized. A clinical improvement was seen in the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, the Zung Anxiety/Depression Scales and the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. The restless legs syndrome also improved. Polysomnographically, sleep stages REM and 4 as well as REM latency increased, stage 3, movement time, stage shifts and periodic leg movements decreased, as did all arousal measures. Subjectively, morning well-being, drive, affectivity and wakefulness improved. Objectively, attention, motor and reaction time performance, critical flicker frequency as well as muscular strength increased, diastolic blood pressure and the pulse rate decreased. Conclusion: Apart from its good therapeutic effects on snoring and respiratory variables (snoring showed complete or partial response in 68%, the apnea-hypopnea index in 67% of the apnea patients), the MRA also improved psychopathology, objective and subjective sleep and awakening quality.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2007

Automatic sleep classification according to Rechtschaffen and Kales

Peter Anderer; Georg Gruber; Silvia Parapatics; Georg Dorffner

Conventionally, polysomnographic recordings are classified according to the rules published in 1968 by Rechtschaffen and Kales (R&K). The present paper describes an automatic classification system embedded in an e-health solution that has been developed and validated in a large database of healthy controls and sleep disturbed patients. The Somnolyzer 24times7trade adheres to the decision rules for visual scoring as closely as possible and includes a structured quality control procedure by a human expert. The final system consists of a raw data quality check, a feature extraction algorithm (density and intensity of sleep/wake-related patterns such as sleep spindles, delta waves, slow and rapid eye movements), a feature matrix plausibility check, a classifier designed as an expert system and a rule-based smoothing procedure for the start and the end of stages REM and 2. The validation based on 286 recordings in both normal healthy subjects aged 20 to 95 years and patients suffering from organic or nonorganic sleep disorders demonstrated an overall epoch-by-epoch agreement of 80% (Cohens Kappa: 0.72) between the Somnolyzer 24times7 and the human expert scoring, as compared with an inter-rater reliability of 77% (Cohens Kappa: 0.68) between two human experts. Two Somnolyzer 24times7 analyses (including a structured quality control by two human experts) revealed an inter-rater reliability close to 1 (Cohens Kappa: 0.991). Moreover, correlation analysis in R&K derived target variables revealed similar - in 36 out of 38 variables even higher - relationships between Somnolyzer 24times7 and expert evaluations as compared to the concordance between two human experts. Thus, the validation study proved the high reliability and validity of the Somnolyzer 24times7 both, on the epoch-by-epoch and on the target variable level. These results demonstrate the applicability of the Somnolyzer 24times7 evaluation in clinical routine and sleep studies.


Journal of Psychopharmacology | 2018

A randomized Phase 2 study to evaluate the orexin-2 receptor antagonist seltorexant in individuals with insomnia without psychiatric comorbidity

Peter de Boer; Wayne C. Drevets; Hany Rofael; Peter van der Ark; Justine M. Kent; I. Kezic; Silvia Parapatics; Georg Dorffner; Joop M. A. van Gerven; Heike Benes; Christian Keicher; Holger Jahn; David J Seiden; Rémy Luthringer

Background: Seltorexant is a potent and selective antagonist of the orexin-2 receptor that is being developed for the treatment of insomnia and major depressive disorder. Aims: The primary objective was to investigate the effect of seltorexant on sleep efficiency after single and multiple dose administration in subjects with insomnia disorder without psychiatric comorbidity. Secondary objectives included evaluation of total sleep time, latency to persistent sleep, and wake after sleep onset. Subjects received 40 mg of seltorexant for five days during Period 1 and placebo during Period 2 or vice versa in this randomized, two-way crossover study. Objective sleep parameters were evaluated by polysomnography over 8 h on Day 1/2 (single dose) and on Day 5/6 (multiple doses). Subjective sleep parameters were assessed by questionnaires. Results: Twenty-seven subjects completed the study. The mean changes in sleep efficiency (% (SD)) of seltorexant from placebo at Day 1/2 were 5.8 (9.2), and 7.9 (9.8) at Day 5/6 (p < 0.001 at both time points); in total sleep time (min (SD)) 27.7 (44.3) and 37.9 (47.1), respectively; in latency to persistent sleep (min (SD)) −18.8 (21.3) and −29.9 (27.7), respectively; and in wake after sleep onset (min (SD)) −11.1 (36.4) and −11.3 (46.5). The most common adverse events were headache and somnolence. Conclusions: Sleep efficiency was increased with seltorexant treatment compared with placebo. Treatment with seltorexant resulted in a prolonged total sleep time, shorter latency to persistent sleep and wake after sleep onset. There were no unexpected safety findings.


Neuropsychobiology | 2010

Contents Vol. 62, 2010

Liliana Dell’Osso; Alessandro Del Debbio; Antonello Veltri; Carolina Bianchi; Isabella Roncaglia; Marina Carlini; Gabriele Massimetti; Mario Catena Dell’Osso; Chiara Vizzaccaro; Donatella Marazziti; Armando Piccinni; Wilfried Dimpfel; Josef A. Hoffmann; Kejin Zhang; Xiaocai Gao; Hongbin Qi; Jing Li; Zijian Zheng; Fuchang Zhang; A. Suwalska; M. Sobieska; Janusz K. Rybakowski; Michela Sarlo; Marianna Munafò; Peter Anderer; Arnaud Moreau; Michael Woertz; Marco Ross; Georg Gruber; Silvia Parapatics

A. Drago, Naples G. Erdmann, Berlin A. Fischer, Göttingen J.M. Ford, San Francisco, Calif. S. Galderisi, Naples M. Hatzinger, Solothurn U. Hegerl, Leipzig K. Hirata, Mibu M. Kato, Osaka J. Kornhuber, Erlangen D. Lehmann, Zürich P. Monteleone, Naples G. Okugawa, Osaka G.N. Papadimitriou, Athens M. Popoli, Milano M. Reuter, Bonn F. Rösler, Marburg G. Ruigt, Oss J.K. Rybakowski, Poznan F. Schneider, Aachen R. Schwarting, Marburg M. Shigeta, Tokyo D. Souery, Brussels A. Steiger, Munich P. Willner, Swansea Associate Editors

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Peter Anderer

Medical University of Vienna

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Georg Gruber

Medical University of Vienna

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Josef Zeitlhofer

Medical University of Vienna

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Georg Dorffner

Medical University of Vienna

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Janusz K. Rybakowski

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Cornelia Sauter

Medical University of Vienna

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Doris Moser

Medical University of Vienna

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