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Application of portable sleep monitoring devices in pregnancy: a comprehensive review.

The physiological, hormonal and biomechanical changes during pregnancy may trigger sleep disorders breathing in pregnant women. Pregnancy-related sleep disorders may associate with adverse fetal and maternal outcomes including gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, preterm birth and gestational hypertension. Most of the screening and diagnostic studies that explore sleep disordered breathing during pregnancy were based on questionnaires which are inherently limited in providing definitive conclusions. The current gold standard for in diagnostics is overnight polysomnography involving the comprehensive measurements of physiological changes during sleep. However, applying the overnight laboratory PSG on pregnant women is not practical due to a number of challenges such patient inconvenience, unnatural sleep dynamics, and expenses due to highly trained personnel and technology. Parallel to the progress in wearable sensors and portable electronics, home sleep monitoring devices became indispensable tools to record the sleep signals of pregnant women at her own sleep environment.
This article reviews the application of portable sleep monitoring devices in pregnancy with particular emphasis on estimating the perinatal outcomes. The advantages and disadvantages of home based sleep monitoring systems compared to subjective sleep questionnaires and overnight polysomnography for pregnant women were evaluated. An overview on the efficiency of the application of home sleep monitoring in terms of accuracy and specificity were presented for particular fetal and maternal outcomes. Based on our review, more homogenous and comparable research is needed to produce conclusive results with home based sleep monitoring systems to study the epidemiology of SDB in pregnancy and its impact on maternal and neonatal health.&#xD.

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