Recovering from heart surgery is physically and mentally exhausting. One of the biggest hurdles for patients during this time is getting quality sleep, which is essential for healing. Doctors are looking closely at several ways to manage sleep in these high-stakes environments.
The review looked at different options like melatonin, dexmedetomidine, and GABAergic hypnotics. Melatonin might help regulate internal clocks and improve how patients feel about their sleep, but its impact on other issues like delirium is not consistent. Dexmedetomidine has sedative properties, though results vary. While GABAergic hypnotics can help people fall asleep faster, they carry risks like respiratory depression or confusion.
Other tools like CPAP and high-flow oxygen focus more on breathing than sleep itself. Because the evidence for some drugs is inconsistent and many behavioral therapies haven't been tested specifically on heart patients, doctors must weigh these options carefully based on each patient's specific needs.