ABSTRACT

Written for sleep technologists, Clinical Atlas of Polysomnography provides basic information regarding normal sleep, sleep disorders, and electrophysiology that is outside of the scope of the AASM manual (AASM Manual for the Scoring of Sleep and Associated Events). It aims to act as a guide through the fundamental aspects of, for example, types of overnight sleep study, establishing a sleep laboratory, preparing the patient for a sleep evaluation study, placement of electrodes and leads, and the scientific aspects of such placement, i.e., why they are placed at that particular position. This information will be very useful in those parts of the globe where formal training in sleep technology is not yet available.





Many further chapters focus on depicting real-time illustrations of sleep data as captured in the sleep laboratory and the scoring of recording data. Information regarding common montages, artifacts, and troubleshooting in the sleep laboratory will facilitate the reader’s journey as a trainee sleep technologist. While scoring sleep recordings, the "When you score the data" histogram can provide a great deal of useful information, and this has been explained in detail in this book. Most importantly, it is prudent to be able to write reports that are both informative and easy to understand by physicians who do not have advanced knowledge of sleep medicine. A chapter has been dedicated to explaining this in detail. Lastly, the authors have provided ready-made forms, questionnaires, and documents that can either be used as they are or with some modifications.





This up-to-date and comprehensive volume will be an invaluable guide for technicians and physicians who wish to practice sleep medicine and will be useful for sleep technology and physician training programs. The volume is intended to complement, not be a substitute for, the AASM scoring manual, as many areas that are covered in the manual are not covered here.

chapter 1|19 pages

Normal Sleep

chapter 2|15 pages

Common sleep disorders

chapter 3|15 pages

Introduction to polysomnography

chapter 4|61 pages

Basic concepts of polysomnography channels

chapter 5|5 pages

Preparations for the sleep study

chapter 6|24 pages

Placement of leads for the sleep study

chapter 7|34 pages

Starting and Closing the Study

chapter 8|17 pages

Calibration and Biocalibration

chapter 10|14 pages

Montages

chapter 11|17 pages

The Concept of Epochs

chapter 12|16 pages

Artifacts

chapter 13|117 pages

Scoring of Data in Adults

chapter 14|3 pages

Use of Video Polysomnography

chapter 15|13 pages

Use of Sleep Histogram

chapter 16|12 pages

Polysomnography in Children: Scoring Rules

chapter 17|6 pages

Test Protocols

chapter 18|8 pages

Documentation

chapter 19|7 pages

Troubleshooting

chapter 21|5 pages

Writing an Informative Report

chapter 22|7 pages

Guidelines for Supplemental Oxygen

chapter 23|3 pages

Infection Control

chapter 24|36 pages

Sleep Lab Management

chapter 25|7 pages

Financial Viability for a Sleep Lab