Goetz R R, Wolk S I, Coplan J D, Ryan N D, Weissman M M
Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York 10032, USA.
Biol Psychiatry. 2001 Jun 1;49(11):930-42. doi: 10.1016/s0006-3223(00)01092-1.
This is a report of a clinical follow-up study (10-15 years later as young adults) of adolescent major depressives and normal control subjects. Polysomnographic data were obtained during the original study period when the subjects were adolescent (time 1). With clinical follow-up (time 2) assessments in hand, our objective was to ascertain whether there were any premorbid polysomnographic signs associated with depression during adolescence.
Based upon initial (during adolescence) and follow-up clinical assessments (as adults), new subject groupings were generated: depression-free normal subjects and original normal subjects who experienced a depressive episode during the follow-up period (latent depressives). Suicidality and recurrence of depression were also examined. Multivariate analysis of covariance was used to analyze group differences in sleep measures and logistic regression for predicting three outcomes: lifetime depression, lifetime suicidality, and recurrence.
Comparison of the depression-free normal subjects, the latent depressives, and the original major depressives revealed significant differences for sleep latency and sleep period time. Comparing all lifetime depressives (original major depressives and the latent depressives) to depression-free normal subjects revealed significantly more stages 3 and 4 combined (ST34) sleep and greater sleep period times among the depressives. An analysis involving the presence or absence of suicidality revealed no overall significant differences between the groups. Comparison of the lifetime depressives grouped by nonrecurrent and recurrent depressive course to the depression-free normal subjects revealed significant difference for sleep period time. Using logistic regression, we found that a longer sleep latency and sleep period time significantly predicted lifetime depression. Gender, ST34 sleep, and an interaction term for ST34 sleep and REM latency significantly predicted lifetime suicidality.
There was evidence of premorbid sleep abnormalities during adolescence. A general pattern of sleep disruption around sleep onset and during the first 100 min of the sleep period and overall sleep was evident among the major and lifetime depressives, involving sleep latency (initial insomnia), sleep period time (hypersomnia), REM latency, and slow-wave sleep. This adds to the body of literature that highlights the importance of the first 100 min of the sleep period in depression.
这是一项针对青少年重度抑郁症患者和正常对照受试者的临床随访研究报告(随访时间为10 - 15年后,此时受试者已步入青年期)。多导睡眠图数据是在最初研究阶段(受试者为青少年时,即时间1)获取的。在掌握了临床随访(时间2)评估结果后,我们的目标是确定青少年期抑郁症是否存在任何病前多导睡眠图特征。
基于初始(青少年期)和随访(成年期)临床评估,生成了新的受试者分组:无抑郁的正常受试者以及在随访期间经历过抑郁发作的原正常受试者(潜在抑郁症患者)。还对自杀倾向和抑郁症复发情况进行了检查。采用多变量协方差分析来分析睡眠指标的组间差异,并使用逻辑回归来预测三个结果:终生抑郁、终生自杀倾向和复发情况。
无抑郁的正常受试者、潜在抑郁症患者和原重度抑郁症患者之间的比较显示,在睡眠潜伏期和睡眠时间方面存在显著差异。将所有终生抑郁症患者(原重度抑郁症患者和潜在抑郁症患者)与无抑郁的正常受试者进行比较,发现抑郁症患者的3期和4期睡眠合并值(ST34)显著更多,且睡眠时间更长。一项涉及有无自杀倾向的分析显示,各组之间总体上无显著差异。将按非复发性和复发性抑郁病程分组的终生抑郁症患者与无抑郁的正常受试者进行比较,发现睡眠时间存在显著差异。通过逻辑回归分析,我们发现较长的睡眠潜伏期和睡眠时间可显著预测终生抑郁。性别、ST34睡眠以及ST34睡眠与快速眼动睡眠潜伏期的交互项可显著预测终生自杀倾向。
有证据表明青少年期存在病前睡眠异常。在重度抑郁症患者和终生抑郁症患者中,睡眠开始前后以及睡眠期前100分钟和整个睡眠过程中普遍存在睡眠中断模式,涉及睡眠潜伏期(初始失眠)、睡眠时间(睡眠过多)、快速眼动睡眠潜伏期和慢波睡眠。这进一步丰富了强调睡眠期前100分钟在抑郁症中重要性的文献资料。