Gaines Jordan, Vgontzas Alexandros N, Fernandez-Mendoza Julio, Basta Maria, Pejovic Slobodanka, He Fan, Bixler Edward O
Sleep Research and Treatment Center, Department of Psychiatry, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA.
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece.
Sleep. 2015 Nov 1;38(11):1727-34. doi: 10.5665/sleep.5152.
Assess the short- and long-term stability of sleep duration in patients with insomnia and normal-sleeping controls.
Observational short-term and prospective studies.
Sleep laboratory.
Patients with insomnia (n = 150) and controls (n = 151) were recruited from the local community or sleep disorders clinic. A subsample of 95 men from the Penn State Adult Cohort (PSAC) were followed up 2.6 y after their initial visit.
Participants underwent a physical examination and 8-h polysomnography (PSG) recording for 3 consecutive nights (controls and insomniacs), or 2 single nights separated by several years (PSAC). Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) assessed the stability of the variables total sleep time (TST), sleep onset latency (SOL), and wake after sleep onset (WASO). We also examined persistence of the first-night classification of "short" versus "normal" sleep duration on subsequent nights.
Stability of TST, SOL, and WASO based on 1 night were slight to moderate in both patients with insomnia (ICC = 0.37-0.57) and controls (ICC = 0.39-0.59), and became substantial to almost perfect when based on the average of 3 nights (ICC = 0.64-0.81). We observed similar degrees of stability for TST and WASO in the longitudinal sample, with moderate stability based on a single night and substantial stability based on both nights. In examining the persistence of "short" and "normal" sleep duration, 71.4% (controls), 74.7% (patients with insomnia), and 72.6% (longitudinal sample) of participants retained their first-night classifications over subsequent nights.
Sleep duration variables, particularly total sleep time based on 3 consecutive nights in both patients with insomnia and controls or two single-night recordings separated by several years, are stable and reflect a person's habitual sleep. Furthermore, a single night in the laboratory may be useful for reliably classifying one's sleep duration.
评估失眠患者和正常睡眠对照者睡眠时间的短期和长期稳定性。
观察性短期和前瞻性研究。
睡眠实验室。
从当地社区或睡眠障碍诊所招募失眠患者(n = 150)和对照者(n = 151)。对宾夕法尼亚州立大学成人队列(PSAC)中的95名男性子样本在首次就诊2.6年后进行随访。
参与者接受体格检查,并连续3晚(对照者和失眠患者)或相隔数年的2个单晚进行8小时多导睡眠图(PSG)记录(PSAC)。组内相关系数(ICC)评估总睡眠时间(TST)、入睡潜伏期(SOL)和睡眠中觉醒时间(WASO)等变量的稳定性。我们还检查了后续夜晚“短”与“正常”睡眠时间的首夜分类持续性。
基于1晚的TST、SOL和WASO稳定性在失眠患者(ICC = 0.37 - 0.57)和对照者(ICC = 0.39 - 0.59)中均为轻度至中度,而基于3晚平均值时则变为高度至几乎完美(ICC = 0.64 - 0.81)。在纵向样本中,我们观察到TST和WASO具有相似程度的稳定性,基于1晚为中度稳定性,基于两晚为高度稳定性。在检查“短”和“正常”睡眠时间的持续性时,71.4%(对照者)、74.7%(失眠患者)和72.6%(纵向样本)的参与者在后续夜晚保持了他们的首夜分类。
睡眠时间变量,特别是基于失眠患者和对照者连续3晚或相隔数年的2个单晚记录的总睡眠时间,是稳定的,反映了一个人的习惯性睡眠。此外,在实验室的1个晚上可能有助于可靠地分类一个人的睡眠时间。