van Heugten-van der Kloet Dalena, Giesbrecht Timo, Merckelbach Harald
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Maastricht University, The Netherlands.
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry. 2015 Jun;47:9-17. doi: 10.1016/j.jbtep.2014.11.002. Epub 2014 Nov 15.
Because of their dreamlike character, authors have speculated about the role that the sleep-wake cycle plays in dissociative symptoms. We investigated whether sleep loss fuels dissociative symptoms and undermines cognitive efficiency, particularly memory functioning.
Fifty-six healthy undergraduate students were randomly assigned to an experimental group (n = 28) and a control group (n = 28). The experimental group was deprived of sleep for 36 h in a sleep laboratory; the control group had a regular night of sleep. Sleepiness, mood, and dissociative symptoms were assessed 6 times in the experimental group (control group: 4 times). Several cognitive tasks were administered.
Sleep deprivation led to an increase in dissociative symptoms, which was mediated by levels of general distress. Feelings of sleepiness preceded an increase of dissociative symptoms and deterioration of mood. Finally, sleep loss also undermined memory of emotional material, especially in highly dissociative individuals.
Limitations included moderate reliability of the mood scale, limited generalizability due to student sample, and a relatively short period of intensive sleep deprivation rather than lengthy but intermittent sleep loss, representative of a clinical population.
We found that sleep deprivation had significant effects on dissociation, sleepiness, and mood. Specifically, sleepiness and dissociation increased during the night, while mood deteriorated. Our findings stress the importance of sleep deficiencies in the development of dissociative symptoms. They support the view that sleep disruptions fuel distress, but also degrade memory and attentional control. It is against this background that dissociative symptoms may arise.
由于其如梦似幻的特征,作者们推测了睡眠-觉醒周期在分离性症状中所起的作用。我们研究了睡眠剥夺是否会加剧分离性症状并损害认知效率,尤其是记忆功能。
56名健康的本科学生被随机分为实验组(n = 28)和对照组(n = 28)。实验组在睡眠实验室被剥夺睡眠36小时;对照组有一个正常的夜间睡眠。在实验组中对嗜睡、情绪和分离性症状进行了6次评估(对照组:4次)。进行了几项认知任务。
睡眠剥夺导致分离性症状增加,这是由一般痛苦水平介导的。嗜睡感先于分离性症状的增加和情绪的恶化出现。最后,睡眠剥夺也损害了对情绪材料的记忆,尤其是在高度分离的个体中。
局限性包括情绪量表的信度中等、由于学生样本导致的普遍性有限,以及相对较短的高强度睡眠剥夺期而非代表临床人群的长时间但间歇性的睡眠剥夺。
我们发现睡眠剥夺对分离、嗜睡和情绪有显著影响。具体而言,夜间嗜睡和分离增加,而情绪恶化。我们的研究结果强调了睡眠不足在分离性症状发展中的重要性。它们支持了睡眠中断会加剧痛苦,但也会损害记忆和注意力控制的观点。正是在这种背景下,分离性症状可能会出现。