All Stories

  1. Effects of low-sodium oxybate on diary-based sleep time in a clinical study in adults with idiopathic hypersomnia
  2. Idiopathic hypersomnia is a 24-hour disorder
  3. Model‐Twin Randomization (MoTR) for Estimating the Recurring Individual Treatment Effect
  4. A personal health large language model for sleep and fitness coaching
  5. A minimal clinically important difference for the sleep inertia visual analog scale in idiopathic hypersomnia
  6. Current knowledge on the pathophysiology of idiopathic hypersomnia and potential mechanisms of action for low-sodium oxybate treatment
  7. 0851 Effectiveness and Safety of Low-Sodium Oxybate in Idiopathic Hypersomnia Participants: Results from the DUET Study
  8. 0831 Effectiveness and Safety of Low-Sodium Oxybate in Participants with Narcolepsy: Results from the DUET Study
  9. 0860 Subjective Sleep Quality with Low-Sodium Oxybate Treatment in Narcolepsy: Results from the DUET Study
  10. 0862 Sleep Architecture with Low-Sodium Oxybate Treatment in Narcolepsy: Results from the DUET Study
  11. Real-world insights into idiopathic hypersomnia symptoms, treatments, and quality of life from the ARISE study: a Plain Language Summary of Publication
  12. Insights into maternal sleep: a large-scale longitudinal analysis of real-world wearable device data before, during, and after pregnancy
  13. Education Research: Program Director Survey
  14. Circadian rhythm of heart rate and activity: A cross-sectional study
  15. Sleep patterns and risk of chronic disease as measured by long-term monitoring with commercial wearable devices in the All of Us Research Program
  16. Long-Term Treatment of Narcolepsy and Idiopathic Hypersomnia with Low-Sodium Oxybate
  17. Impairment in Functioning and Quality of Life in Patients with Idiopathic Hypersomnia: The Real World Idiopathic Hypersomnia Outcomes Study (ARISE)
  18. Characteristics and Disease Burden of Patients With Idiopathic Hypersomnia With and Without Long Sleep Time: The Real-World Idiopathic Hypersomnia Outcomes Study (ARISE) (P2-13.006)
  19. Symptom Severity and Treatment Satisfaction in Patients with Idiopathic Hypersomnia: The Real World Idiopathic Hypersomnia Outcomes Study (ARISE)
  20. Sleep and seizure risk in epilepsy: bed and wake times are more important than sleep duration
  21. Sleep architecture is associated with core symptom severity in autism spectrum disorder
  22. Characterization of autonomic symptom burden in long COVID: A global survey of 2,314 adults
  23. A school-based health and mindfulness curriculum improves children’s objectively measured sleep: a prospective observational cohort study
  24. Proteomic Biomarkers of the Apnea Hypopnea Index and Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Insights into the Pathophysiology of Presence, Severity, and Treatment Response
  25. The genetic etiology of periodic limb movement in sleep
  26. Genetic risk for subjective reports of insomnia associates only weakly with polygraphic measures of insomnia in 2,770 adults
  27. Estimation of Apnea-Hypopnea Index Using Deep Learning On 3-D Craniofacial Scans
  28. Sleep: The price we pay for higher order cognition
  29. The impact of student debt on neurological practice
  30. Cutaneous α-synuclein is correlated with autonomic impairment in isolated rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder
  31. Current Status and Future Strategies for Mentoring Women in Neurology
  32. High-Resolution Spectral Sleep Analysis Reveals a Novel Association Between Slow Oscillations and Memory Retention in Elderly Adults
  33. Commentary on “The Association Between Biomarkers and Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Across the Alzheimer's Disease Spectrum”
  34. Active and Distance Learning in Neuroscience Education
  35. Frequency and severity of autonomic symptoms in idiopathic hypersomnia
  36. The 5‐HTTLPR Long, not Short, Allele Predicts Two‐year Longitudinal Increases in Cortisol and Declines in Verbal Memory in Older Adults
  37. Active Learning in Psychiatry Education: Current Practices and Future Perspectives
  38. Study design considerations for sleep-disordered breathing devices
  39. Images: Facial cataplexy with demonstration of persistent eye movements
  40. Factors Associated with Supportive Care Service Use Among California Alzheimer’s Disease Patients and Their Caregivers
  41. Strategic Considerations for Applying the Flipped Classroom to Neurology Education
  42. Author response: Incorporating sleep medicine content into medical school through neuroscience core curricula
  43. Education Research: Flipped classroom in neurology
  44. Daylight saving time transitions are not associated with increased seizure incidence
  45. Non-invasive machine learning estimation of effort differentiates sleep-disordered breathing pathology
  46. Neurologic and neuroscience education
  47. Neurology residency training in 2017
  48. Periodic limb movement prevalence in natural population cohort
  49. Incorporating sleep medicine content into medical school through neuroscience core curricula
  50. Integrating the Divided Nasal Cannula Into Routine Polysomnography to Assess Nasal Cycle: Feasibility and Effect on Outcomes
  51. 0323 Design of a Deep Learning Based Algorithm forAutomatic Detection of Leg Movements During Sleep
  52. 0627 Improved Primary CNS Hypersomnia Diagnosis With Statistical Machine Learning
  53. Automatic, electrocardiographic-based detection of autonomic arousals and their association with cortical arousals, leg movements, and respiratory events in sleep
  54. Breathing Disturbances Without Hypoxia Are Associated With Objective Sleepiness in Sleep Apnea
  55. Diagnosis and Management of Narcolepsy
  56. Genetics of vaccination-related narcolepsy
  57. 0505 SLEEP APNEA BREATHING DISTURBANCES ARE ASSOCIATED WITH OBJECTIVE SLEEPINESS INDEPENDENT OF HYPOXIA
  58. Foreword
  59. Anatomy and Physiology of Normal Sleep
  60. Genetic Basis of Chronotype in Humans: Insights From Three Landmark GWAS
  61. Education Research: Neurology resident education
  62. Voice of young neurologists around the world
  63. Clinical Reasoning: A 44-year-old woman with rapidly progressive weakness and ophthalmoplegia
  64. Clinical Reasoning: A 68-year-old man with a first presentation of status epilepticus
  65. International Issues: Obtaining an adult neurology residency position in the United States: An overview
  66. What We Think before a Voluntary Movement
  67. Prediction of human voluntary movement before it occurs
  68. Help