Relations (1)

related 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts

Sleep deprivation and sleep fragmentation are related as distinct clinical manifestations of sleep disorders, as evidenced by their comparative analysis in academic literature [1] and their classification as primary types of sleep failure [2]. Both concepts are frequently studied together in the context of sleep continuity and disorder research [3].

Facts (3)

Sources
Short- and long-term health consequences of sleep disruption dovepress.com Goran Medic, Micheline Wille, Michiel EH Hemels · Dove Press 2 facts
procedureThe authors conducted a nonsystematic literature review of English-language publications in the PubMed database during March and April 2016, using search terms including 'caregiver AND sleep', 'insomnia', 'middle insomnia', 'restless leg[s] syndrome', 'sleep apnea', 'sleep continuity', 'sleep deprivation', 'sleep disorder', 'sleep disruption', 'sleep disturbance', and 'sleep fragmentation', which generated over 60,000 hits.
claimThere are approximately 100 sleep disorder classifications, which typically manifest as failure to obtain necessary sleep (sleep deprivation), inability to maintain sleep continuity (disrupted sleep/sleep fragmentation/middle insomnia), or events occurring during sleep (e.g., sleep apnea, restless legs syndrome).
Extent and Health Consequences of Chronic Sleep Loss and ... - NCBI ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Colten HR, Altevogt BM · National Academies Press 1 fact
referenceBonnet MH and Arand DL published a study titled 'Clinical effects of sleep fragmentation versus sleep deprivation' in Sleep Medicine Reviews in 2003 (Volume 7, Issue 4, pages 297–310).