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1  efficiency (percentage of time in bed spent asleep).
2 -reported and actigraphy-assessed time spent asleep.
3 ith lateralized hand responses while falling asleep.
4 postures when awake, and hyperextension when asleep.
5  reductions in the time their denizens spend asleep.
6  before imaging were spent awake rather than asleep.
7 rations, reaching up to 106-h awake and 48-h asleep.
8 ere that infants exhibit learning even while asleep.
9 ng wakefulness is counterbalanced by staying asleep.
10 cted by how long an animal has been awake or asleep.
11 on maintaining airway patency awake, but not asleep.
12  they recall the location in which they fell asleep.
13 emory for the location in which the rat fell asleep.
14 h is an inability to breathe unassisted when asleep.
15 , sniffing occurred even while pups remained asleep.
16 pulse oximetry while children were awake and asleep.
17  any measured local stimulus either awake or asleep.
18 f wakefulness and dissipates with time spent asleep, a process called sleep homeostasis.
19 ates for traditional awake DBS or prefer the asleep alternative.
20 esponse to visual and auditory stimuli while asleep and awake.
21 ants reading an LE-eBook took longer to fall asleep and had reduced evening sleepiness, reduced melat
22 vels in Kenyon cells decline when flies fall asleep and increase when they wake up.
23 reflects the degree of difficulty of falling asleep and is a critical measure for the FNE.
24 antly higher arousal durations after falling asleep and more periodic limb movements (P = 0.002 and P
25 a symptoms, especially difficulty initiating asleep and nonrestorative sleep, are associated with a m
26 l between the time a person attempts to fall asleep and the onset of sleep) (1.7+/-0.4 vs. 0.3+/-0.3
27  mass index was inversely related to average asleep and waking oxygen saturation.
28         These data provide evidence that low asleep and waking oxygen saturations are associated with
29                                 Like falling asleep and waking up, many biological processes in mamma
30 or oxygenation/ventilation support (awake or asleep) and required admission to our pediatric ICU.
31 asing number of symptoms, difficulty falling asleep, and difficulty returning to sleep.
32 e sleep duration, sleep onset - time to fall asleep, and frequencies of night awakenings).
33 cluding tremor, transient difficulty falling asleep, and mild urinary retention (requiring early morn
34 lative contributions of time spent awake and asleep are unknown.
35 hesiologists: awake/alert, drowsy/arousable, asleep/arousable, deep sedation, and general anesthesia.
36 ay; 26% reported persistent problems falling asleep at night; 31% experienced problems sleeping throu
37  arrest; of these, 52% were determined to be asleep at time of event, and these deaths were more like
38 e and cooperative) or deep sedation (patient asleep, awakening upon physical stimulation).
39 atment-induced decrease of clinic, awake, or asleep BP are unknown.
40 e, progressive treatment-induced decrease of asleep BP, a potential therapeutic target requiring ambu
41 urately derive individualized mean awake and asleep BP.
42 P was not significant when corrected by mean asleep BP.
43                        After the patient was asleep but before the operation, we spent 15 minutes can
44  after the shift but not with faster falling asleep compared with placebo.
45                                 When we fall asleep, consciousness fades yet the brain remains active
46          Daytime sleepiness and time to fall asleep decreased during weight loss.
47 d OR, 1.23 [95% CI, 1.08-1.40]), and falling asleep during meetings (14.1% vs 7.0%; adjusted OR, 1.95
48 4 carriers and 36 noncarriers), who remained asleep during the scanning session.
49 tic resonance imaging (MRI) only if they are asleep, either under sedation, which is deeper than cons
50 (2100-0200) while awake throughout and while asleep from 0000 to 0200 in random sequence.
51 M: 6.1 x 10(3) cm(-3)) or the occupants were asleep (GM: 5.1 x 10(3) cm(-3)).
52 the frequency of inactive behavior (still or asleep) in this group increased.
53 f self-reported sleep, actigraphy time spent asleep increased by 20 minutes (95% confidence interval:
54 ability to process sensory information while asleep is yet unclear.
55 s item and the 2) difficulty falling/staying asleep item of the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale and
56                                      Falling asleep leads to a loss of sensory awareness and to the i
57 somnia is defined by difficulties in falling asleep, maintaining sleep, and early morning awakening,
58                        The inability to fall asleep may be related to a failure of arousal mechanisms
59 ions, although rats with triple lesions were asleep more during the light-to-dark transition period.
60 they were more tired, needed more naps, fell asleep more rapidly, and had higher anxiety/depression s
61 brillation, usually occurring at night while asleep (n=17), or were suspected to have had symptoms si
62 omnia (e.g., taking at least 2 hours to fall asleep nearly every night).
63 ciated with primary thoracic placement in an asleep neonate.
64 al ligand, myoinhibitory peptide (MIP), fall asleep normally, but have difficulty in maintaining a sl
65  experienced by 27 patients; 'prickling' or 'asleep numbness' in 20, mild pain in 13 and sensory loss
66  configuration depends on whether the rat is asleep or awake.
67      We take for granted the ability to fall asleep or to snap out of sleep into wakefulness, but the
68 ide at 10-year follow-up: difficulty falling asleep (OR, 2.24; 95% CI, 1.27-3.93; P < .01) and nonres
69             For every 1% drop in the average asleep oxygen saturation, there was a 2.1 g/m(2.7) incre
70 V off medication score (78.4% awake vs 59.7% asleep, p=0.022).
71                                        While asleep, people heard sounds that had earlier been associ
72                   Trouble falling or staying asleep, poor sleep quality, and short or long sleep dura
73  location in the room in which the rats fell asleep, rather than the location to which they were move
74 nsitioned the brain to a state of arousal in asleep rats.
75 ple adjustments, frequent difficulty falling asleep (RR = 5.3, 95% confidence interval: 1.1, 27.9) an
76 after the intervention), and ease of falling asleep (sleep diary score, 2.32 [0.89] at baseline vs 1.
77 in bed, sleep latency (time required to fall asleep), sleep duration, and sleep efficiency (percentag
78                                         Mean asleep systolic BP was the most significant predictor of
79 in the risk of CKD per 1-SD decrease in mean asleep systolic BP, independent of changes in mean clini
80  children with autism (n = 39) and naturally asleep typically developing children (n = 39) between 2
81 07), daytime fatigue (p = 0.02), and falling asleep unintentionally during daytime (p = 0.002).
82 in diabetic subjects (the final awake versus asleep values were 240 +/- 86 and 85 +/- 47, 205 +/- 24
83 as "residential fatalities" most likely were asleep vs 10 (18%) of 56 of those whose deaths were iden
84 a symptoms (restlessness, difficulty falling asleep, waking at night, trouble getting back to sleep,
85                    Mean amount of time spent asleep was 7.85 (standard deviation, 1.12) hours by self
86               Sleep efficiency (percent time asleep) was 77 +/- 18% in the diabetic subjects, but onl
87 which is the percentage of time in bed spent asleep, was the primary measure of sleep quality.
88 ices of mice and rats that had been awake or asleep, we found that the frequency and amplitude of mEP
89 sequence learning, while human subjects were asleep, we measured spontaneous cortical oscillations by
90 -reported and actigraphy-assessed time spent asleep were lower with male sex, younger age, sleep effi
91                            Patients who were asleep were more likely to have unwitnessed arrests.
92 and sleep efficiency (percent of time in bed asleep) were assessed via seven nights of wrist actigrap
93 not fire related," 49 (36%) most likely were asleep when poisoned.
94  [OR], 1.43 [95% CI, 1.23-1.67]); of falling asleep while driving (14.4% vs 9.2%; adjusted OR, 1.51 [
95 cational programs about the risks of falling asleep while driving are needed for physicians, the publ
96  total cohort, 1294 (26.1%) reported falling asleep while driving at least 1 time a month.
97 tended shifts, the risk that they would fall asleep while driving or while stopped in traffic was sig
98 ions of neurons in the cortex may be falling asleep, with negative consequences for performance.

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