Katic Bozena, Heywood James, Turek Fred, Chiauzzi Emil, Vaughan Timothy E, Simacek Kristina, Wicks Paul, Jain Sachin, Winrow Christopher, Renger John J
PatientsLikeMe Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA.
PatientsLikeMe Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA.
Sleep Med. 2015 Nov;16(11):1332-1341. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2015.07.024. Epub 2015 Aug 21.
Insomnia is increasingly recognized to be comorbid with one or more medical conditions. This study used an online research platform to characterize insomnia across different mental and physical conditions.
A custom cross-sectional survey was fielded online to 31,208 users of the patient community PatientsLikeMe. The survey queried members on National Sleep Foundation-defined insomnia risk (waking up feeling unrefreshed, difficulty falling asleep, waking in the middle of the night, or waking too early).
Complete results were obtained from 5256 patients with 11 comorbid conditions. Seventy-six percent of US-based respondents were at risk for insomnia. Patients who reported difficulty falling asleep were found to have nearly twice the odds of self-reporting insomnia (odds ratio [OR]: 1.84; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.5-2.1) when compared to those who do not have difficulty falling asleep, whereas those who reported waking during the night or waking up unrefreshed were no more likely (OR: 1.025 and 1.032, respectively) to report that they suffered from insomnia than those who did not experience these issues. Although insomnia was self-reported as severe or very severe across most conditions, few respondents had actually been diagnosed with insomnia by a physician. After adjustment for age and gender, there was an independent and strong effect of primary condition severity on insomnia risk, and those with severe epilepsy (0.93), depressive disorders (0.92), and fibromyalgia (0.92) occupied the highest risk probabilities.
The high rate of severity and frequency of insomnia across a multitude of mental and physical conditions reveals an opportunity for better disease management through enhanced insomnia awareness.
失眠越来越被认为与一种或多种医学病症共存。本研究使用在线研究平台来描述不同心理和身体状况下的失眠情况。
在患者社区PatientsLikeMe的31208名用户中进行了一项定制的横断面调查。该调查询问成员关于美国国家睡眠基金会定义的失眠风险(醒来感觉不清醒;难以入睡;半夜醒来;或过早醒来)。
从5256名患有11种共存病症的患者中获得了完整结果。76%的美国受访者有失眠风险。与那些没有入睡困难的人相比,那些报告难以入睡的人自我报告失眠的几率几乎是其两倍(优势比[OR]:1.84;95%置信区间[CI]:1.5 - 2.1),而那些报告夜间醒来或醒来感觉不清醒的人报告自己患有失眠的可能性并不比没有经历这些问题的人更高(OR分别为1.025和1.032)。尽管在大多数情况下失眠被自我报告为严重或非常严重,但很少有受访者实际上被医生诊断为失眠。在对年龄和性别进行调整后,主要病症的严重程度对失眠风险有独立且强烈的影响,患有严重癫痫(0.93)、抑郁症(0.92)和纤维肌痛(0.92)的人失眠风险概率最高。
多种心理和身体状况下失眠的高严重程度和高频率表明,通过提高对失眠的认识,有机会更好地管理疾病。