Rek Stephanie, Sheaves Bryony, Freeman Daniel
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, OX3 7JX, UK.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2017 Sep;52(9):1123-1133. doi: 10.1007/s00127-017-1408-7. Epub 2017 Jul 15.
Nightmares are inherently distressing, prevent restorative sleep, and are associated with a number of psychiatric problems, but have rarely been the subject of empirical study. Negative affect, linked to stressful events, is generally considered the key trigger of nightmares; hence nightmares have most often been considered in the context of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, many individuals with heightened negative affect do not have nightmares. The objective of this study was to identify mechanistically plausible factors, beyond negative affect, that may explain why individuals experience nightmares.
846 participants from the UK general population completed an online survey about nightmare occurrence and severity (pre-occupation, distress, and impairment), negative affect, worry, depersonalisation, hallucinatory experiences, paranoia, alcohol use, sleep duration, physical activity levels, PTSD symptoms, and stressful life events. Associations of nightmares with the putative predictive factors were tested controlling for levels of negative affect. Analyses were also repeated controlling for levels of PTSD and the recent occurrence of stressful life events.
Nightmare occurrence, adjusting for negative affect, was associated with higher levels of worry, depersonalisation, hallucinatory experiences, paranoia, and sleep duration (odds ratios 1.25-1.45). Nightmare severity, controlling for negative affect, was associated with higher levels of worry, depersonalisation, hallucinatory experiences, and paranoia (R s: 0.33-0.39). Alcohol use and physical activity levels were not associated with nightmares.
The study identifies a number of potential predictors of the occurrence and severity of nightmares. Causal roles require testing in future longitudinal, experimental, and treatment studies.
噩梦本质上令人痛苦,会妨碍恢复性睡眠,且与多种精神问题相关,但很少成为实证研究的对象。与压力事件相关的消极情绪通常被认为是噩梦的关键触发因素;因此,噩梦最常被置于创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的背景下考虑。然而,许多消极情绪增强的个体并未经历噩梦。本研究的目的是确定除消极情绪之外,可能解释个体为何会经历噩梦的、在机制上合理的因素。
来自英国普通人群的846名参与者完成了一项关于噩梦发生情况及严重程度(困扰程度、痛苦程度和损害程度)、消极情绪、担忧、人格解体、幻觉体验、偏执、饮酒情况、睡眠时间、身体活动水平、创伤后应激障碍症状以及压力性生活事件的在线调查。在控制消极情绪水平的情况下,测试了噩梦与假定预测因素之间的关联。在控制创伤后应激障碍水平和近期压力性生活事件发生情况的条件下,也重复进行了分析。
在调整消极情绪后,噩梦的发生与更高水平的担忧、人格解体、幻觉体验、偏执以及睡眠时间相关(优势比为1.25 - 1.45)。在控制消极情绪的情况下,噩梦的严重程度与更高水平的担忧、人格解体、幻觉体验和偏执相关(R值:0.33 - 0.39)。饮酒情况和身体活动水平与噩梦无关。
该研究确定了一些噩梦发生和严重程度的潜在预测因素。因果关系需要在未来的纵向、实验性和治疗性研究中进行检验。