Smagula Stephen F, Krafty Robert T, Taylor Briana J, Martire Lynn M, Schulz Richard, Hall Martica H
Department of Psychiatry, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
J Sleep Res. 2017 Dec;26(6):718-725. doi: 10.1111/jsr.12549. Epub 2017 May 10.
Depression is associated with disturbances to sleep and the 24-h sleep-wake pattern (known as the rest-activity rhythm: RAR). However, there remains a need to identify the specific sleep/RAR correlates of depression symptom severity in population subgroups, such as strained dementia caregivers, who are at elevated risk for major depressive disorder. We assessed the cross-sectional associations of sleep/RARs with non-sleep depression symptom severity among 57 (mean age: 74 years, standard deviation: 7.4) strained dementia caregivers who were currently without clinical depression. We derived sleep measures from polysomnography and actigraphy, modelled RARs using a sigmoidally transformed cosine curve and measured non-sleep depression symptom severity using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HRDS) with sleep items removed. The following sleep-wake measures were associated with greater depression symptom severity (absolute Spearman's correlations ranged from 0.23 to 0.32): more time awake after sleep onset (WASO), higher RAR middle level (mesor), relatively shorter active periods (alpha), earlier evening settling time (down-mesor) and less steep RARs (beta). In multivariable analysis, high WASO and low RAR beta were associated independently with depression symptom severity. Predicted non-sleep HDRS means (95% confidence intervals) in caregivers with and without these characteristics were: normal WASO/beta = 3.7 (2.3-5.0), high WASO/normal beta = 5.5 (3.5-7.6), normal WASO/low beta = 6.3 (3.6-8.9) and high WASO/low beta = 8.1 (5.3-10.9). Thus, in our sample of strained caregivers, greater sleep fragmentation (WASO) and less sustained/sharply segregated resting and active periods (low RAR beta) correlate uniquely with depression symptom severity. Longitudinal studies are needed to establish whether these independent sleep-wake correlates of depression symptoms explain heightened depression risk in dementia caregivers.
抑郁症与睡眠及24小时睡眠-觉醒模式(即静息-活动节律:RAR)紊乱有关。然而,仍有必要确定在特定人群亚组中,如患有痴呆症的照料者(他们患重度抑郁症的风险较高),抑郁症症状严重程度与睡眠/RAR的具体关联。我们评估了57名(平均年龄:74岁,标准差:7.4)目前无临床抑郁症的患有痴呆症的紧张照料者的睡眠/RAR与非睡眠抑郁症症状严重程度之间的横断面关联。我们通过多导睡眠图和活动记录仪得出睡眠测量值,使用S形变换余弦曲线对RAR进行建模,并使用去除睡眠项目的汉密尔顿抑郁量表(HRDS)测量非睡眠抑郁症症状严重程度。以下睡眠-觉醒测量值与更严重的抑郁症症状相关(绝对斯皮尔曼相关系数范围为0.23至0.32):睡眠开始后清醒时间更长(WASO)、RAR中值水平更高(中值)、活动期相对较短(α)、傍晚入睡时间更早(下降中值)以及RAR斜率较小(β)。在多变量分析中,高WASO和低RARβ与抑郁症症状严重程度独立相关。具有和不具有这些特征的照料者预测的非睡眠HRDS均值(95%置信区间)分别为:正常WASO/β = 3.7(2.3 - 5.0)、高WASO/正常β = 5.5(3.5 - 7.6)、正常WASO/低β = 6.3(3.6 - 8.9)和高WASO/低β = 8.1(5.3 - 10.9)。因此,在我们患有痴呆症的紧张照料者样本中,睡眠碎片化程度越高(WASO)以及静息和活动期的持续性/区分度越低(低RARβ)与抑郁症症状严重程度具有独特的相关性。需要进行纵向研究以确定这些抑郁症症状与睡眠-觉醒的独立关联是否能解释痴呆症照料者抑郁症风险的增加。