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Dementia is common in aging societies and is often accompanied by sundowning syndrome and sleep problems. These symptoms can be very distressing for patients and place a heavy burden on family members and professional caregivers. Aromatherapy using essential oils, especially lavender, has shown promise in reducing behavioral symptoms in people with dementia, but evidence on compound essential oil formulas and their effects on both sundowning and sleep quality remains limited.
This study will compare two different compound essential oil formulas for people with dementia living in long-term care facilities in southern Taiwan. Each participant will receive both formulas at different times in a repeated crossover design. In Phase 1, participants will receive a stimulating formula in the morning (rosemary and lemon) and a relaxing formula in the afternoon (lavender and sweet orange). In Phase 2, they will receive a calming blend that includes sweet orange, spike lavender, true lavender, vetiver, bergamot, and Roman chamomile. Aromatherapy will be administered by diffusion twice a day, five days per week, for two weeks in each phase.
The main outcomes are changes in agitation and sleep quality, measured using the Chinese versions of the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. The findings are expected to provide preliminary evidence on whether compound essential oil formulas can be a simple, non-drug approach to help manage sundowning syndrome and improve sleep in people with dementia.
Full description
Dementia is increasingly prevalent in rapidly aging societies and is frequently accompanied by neuropsychiatric symptoms, including sundowning syndrome and disturbed sleep-wake cycles. Sundowning behaviors-such as agitation, wandering, and confusion that worsen in the late afternoon or evening-are particularly challenging to manage and are associated with poorer sleep quality, increased use of psychotropic medications, and heightened caregiver burden. Non-pharmacological interventions that are safe, simple, and feasible in long-term care settings are urgently needed.
Aromatherapy has emerged as a potentially useful complementary therapy for behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia. Prior studies have suggested that lavender and other essential oils may reduce agitation and promote relaxation; however, most existing evidence focuses on single oils, small samples, or non-standardized protocols. Data on compound essential oil formulations, especially those targeting both sundowning syndrome and sleep quality, remain limited.
This study is designed to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of two compound essential oil formulas on agitation related to sundowning and on overall sleep quality in patients with dementia. A repeated crossover design will be used. Participants will be recruited from long-term care facilities in southern Taiwan and must have a medical diagnosis of dementia and observable sundowning or sleep disturbance.
The intervention includes two 2-week aromatherapy phases, separated by an appropriate washout period. Aromatherapy is delivered by diffusion in the dementia care unit twice daily (09:00 and 14:00), five days per week.
Phase 1 (Formula A):
Morning: Formula A1, a 2:1 blend of organic rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) and organic lemon (Citrus limon) essential oils, intended to promote alertness and daytime activity.
Afternoon: Formula A2, a 2:1 blend of organic lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) and organic sweet orange (Citrus sinensis) essential oils, intended to reduce agitation and support evening relaxation.
Phase 2 (Formula B):
Participants receive a calming compound blend (Formula B) that includes organic sweet orange, spike lavender, true lavender, vetiver, bergamot, and Roman chamomile. This formulation is designed to provide broader anxiolytic, sedative, and stabilizing effects across the day.
All essential oils are high-quality organic products, and diffusion is carried out under standardized conditions by trained staff. Usual medical and nursing care continues throughout the study.
Outcome measures focus on behavioral agitation and sleep quality. Agitation associated with sundowning is assessed using the Chinese version of the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CCMAI), and sleep quality is evaluated using the Chinese version of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (CPSQI). Demographic and clinical characteristics are collected to describe the sample and to explore potential covariates.
Because each participant serves as his or her own control across the two aromatherapy sequences, data will be analyzed using a linear mixed model (LMM) to examine within-subject changes over time, while accounting for period and sequence effects. The primary comparisons will focus on differences in CCMAI and CPSQI scores between Formula A and Formula B phases.
The expected outcome is to generate preliminary clinical evidence that compound essential oil formulations can be integrated as a simple, low-risk, non-pharmacological strategy to manage sundowning symptoms and improve sleep in people with dementia. If effective, these aromatherapy protocols could be adapted for long-term care facilities, community programs, and home-based caregiving, thereby helping to reduce caregiver burden and improve quality of life for both patients and families.
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35 participants in 1 patient group
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Hsueh-Chin Lo, PhD candidate
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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