Singareddy Ravi, Uhde Thomas W
Department of Psychiatry (H073), Penn State College of Medicine, 500 University Drive, PO box 850, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2009 Jan;112(1-3):262-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2008.04.026. Epub 2008 Jun 16.
Patients with panic disorder (PD) often complain of sleep disturbances. PD patients have high co-morbid depression and almost 65-70% reports a history of nocturnal panic attacks. It is possible that both nocturnal-sleep panic attacks and depression contribute to sleep disturbances in PD patients. However, the individual and interactive effects of nocturnal-sleep panic attacks and lifetime depression on subjective sleep in PD are unknown.
The National Institute of Mental Health Panic Disorder Questionnaire (NIMH-PQ) was administered to 773 individuals who met DSM-IV criteria for PD. All of these subjects completed queries related to nocturnal-sleep panic attacks, lifetime depression, difficulty sleeping, and sleep duration.
We examined difficulty in sleeping and sleep duration in four subgroups [PD without nocturnal panic attacks or lifetime depression (NP-D-), PD with nocturnal panic attacks (NP+D-), PD with lifetime depression (NP-D+), and PD with both nocturnal panic attacks and lifetime depression (NP+D+)]. Significantly greater proportions of NP+D+ subjects reported difficulty sleeping compared to other three subgroups. In addition, the NP+D+ patients reported significantly decreased subjective sleep durations compared to the other three subgroups. Using < or = 5h as a criteria for severe sleep restriction, approximately 20% of the NP+D+ patients, compared to 9.2%, 9.6%, and 2.5% in the NP+D-, NP-D+, NP-D- subgroups, respectively, reported sleeping 5h or less. 8.2% of panic disorder patients reported excessive sleeping per sleeping period.
A high percentage of panic disorder individuals report subjective sleep disturbances. Not surprisingly, an unusually high prevalence of patients with nocturnal panic attacks or depression have sleep problems and 92.3% of patients with both nocturnal panic attacks and depression report striking extremes in sleep duration or insomnia. Thus, nocturnal-sleep panic attacks and depression are independently as well as interactively associated with increased sleep disturbances in panic disorder. Although these findings are expected, they underscore the importance of assessing sleep functions, including over-sleeping, in panic disorder patients.
惊恐障碍(PD)患者常抱怨存在睡眠障碍。PD患者合并抑郁症的比例较高,近65% - 70%的患者报告有夜间惊恐发作史。夜间睡眠惊恐发作和抑郁症都有可能导致PD患者出现睡眠障碍。然而,夜间睡眠惊恐发作和终生抑郁对PD患者主观睡眠的个体及交互作用尚不清楚。
对773名符合DSM - IV标准的PD患者进行了美国国立精神卫生研究所惊恐障碍问卷(NIMH - PQ)评估。所有这些受试者都完成了与夜间睡眠惊恐发作、终生抑郁、睡眠困难和睡眠时间相关的询问。
我们在四个亚组中研究了睡眠困难和睡眠时间[无夜间惊恐发作或终生抑郁的PD患者(NP - D -)、有夜间惊恐发作的PD患者(NP + D -)、有终生抑郁的PD患者(NP - D +)以及既有夜间惊恐发作又有终生抑郁的PD患者(NP + D +)]。与其他三个亚组相比,NP + D +亚组中报告睡眠困难的比例显著更高。此外,与其他三个亚组相比,NP + D +患者报告的主观睡眠时间显著缩短。以≤5小时作为严重睡眠受限的标准,分别有大约20%的NP + D +患者报告睡眠时间为5小时或更短,而NP + D -、NP - D +、NP - D -亚组中的比例分别为9.2%、9.6%和2.5%。8.2%的惊恐障碍患者报告每个睡眠周期睡眠时间过长。
高比例的惊恐障碍患者报告有主观睡眠障碍。不足为奇的是,夜间惊恐发作或抑郁症患者中睡眠问题的患病率异常高,92.3%既有夜间惊恐发作又有抑郁症的患者报告在睡眠时间或失眠方面存在显著异常。因此,夜间睡眠惊恐发作和抑郁症在惊恐障碍中与睡眠障碍增加独立相关且存在交互作用。尽管这些发现在意料之中,但它们强调了评估惊恐障碍患者睡眠功能(包括睡眠过多)的重要性。