Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, United States.
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, United States; Institute for Mental Health Research, The University of Texas at Austin, United States.
Sleep Med. 2014 Jan;15(1):144-9. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2013.10.006. Epub 2013 Nov 6.
Sleep disturbance is a common feature of depression. However, recent work has found that individuals who are vulnerable to depression report poorer sleep quality compared to their low-risk counterparts, suggesting that sleep disturbance may precede depression. In addition, both sleep disturbance and depression are related to deficits in cognitive control processes. Thus we examined if poor sleep quality predicts subsequent increases in depressive symptoms and if levels of cognitive control mediated this relation.
Thirty-five undergraduate students participated in two experimental sessions separated by 3 weeks. Participants wore an actigraph watch between sessions, which provided an objective measure of sleep patterns. We assessed self-reported sleep quality and depressive symptoms at both sessions. Last, individuals completed an exogenous cuing task, which measured ability to disengage attention from neutral and negative stimuli during the second session.
Using path analyses, we found that both greater self-reported sleep difficulty and more objective sleep stability measures significantly predicted greater difficulty disengaging attention (i.e., less cognitive control) from negative stimuli. Less cognitive control over negative stimuli in turn predicted increased depression symptoms at the second session. Exploratory associations among the circadian locomotor output cycles kaput gene, CLOCK, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs11932595, as well as sleep assessments and depressive symptoms also are presented.
These preliminary results suggest that sleep disruptions may contribute to increases in depressive symptoms via their impact on cognitive control. Further, variation in the CLOCK gene may be associated with sleep quality.
睡眠障碍是抑郁症的一个常见特征。然而,最近的研究发现,易患抑郁症的个体报告的睡眠质量比低风险个体差,这表明睡眠障碍可能先于抑郁症发生。此外,睡眠障碍和抑郁症都与认知控制过程的缺陷有关。因此,我们研究了睡眠质量差是否预示着随后抑郁症状的增加,以及认知控制水平是否介导了这种关系。
35 名大学生在 3 周内参加了两次实验。参与者在两次实验之间佩戴活动记录仪手表,该手表提供了睡眠模式的客观测量。我们在两次实验中评估了自我报告的睡眠质量和抑郁症状。最后,个体在第二次实验中完成了外源性提示任务,该任务测量了从中性和负性刺激中分散注意力的能力。
通过路径分析,我们发现自我报告的睡眠困难和更客观的睡眠稳定性测量都显著预测了从负性刺激中更难分散注意力(即认知控制能力较差)。负面刺激下认知控制能力较差反过来又预示着第二次实验中抑郁症状的增加。还介绍了 circadian locomotor output cycles kaput 基因、CLOCK、单核苷酸多态性(SNP)rs11932595 以及睡眠评估和抑郁症状之间的探索性关联。
这些初步结果表明,睡眠障碍可能通过对认知控制的影响导致抑郁症状的增加。此外,CLOCK 基因的变异可能与睡眠质量有关。