Wang Sophia, Meeker Jared W, Perkins Anthony J, Gao Sujuan, Khan Sikandar H, Sigua Ninotchka L, Manchanda Shalini, Boustani Malaz A, Khan Babar A
Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA,
Center for Health Innovation and Implementation Science, Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Indianapolis, IN, USA,
Int J Gen Med. 2019 Mar 22;12:125-130. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S193084. eCollection 2019.
Sleep disturbances in critically ill patients are associated with poorer long-term clinical outcomes and quality of life. Studies are needed to better characterize associations and risk factors for persistent sleep disturbances after intensive care unit (ICU) discharge. Psychiatric disorders are frequently associated with sleep disturbances, but the role of psychiatric symptoms in sleep disturbances in ICU survivors has not been well-studied.
To examine the association between psychiatric symptoms and sleep disturbances in ICU survivors.
112 adult ICU survivors seen from July 2011 to August 2016 in the Critical Care Recovery Center, an ICU survivor clinic at the Eskenazi Hospital in Indianapolis, IN, USA, were assessed for sleep disturbances (insomnia, hypersomnia, difficulty with sleep onset, difficulty with sleep maintenance, and excessive daytime sleepiness) and psychiatric symptoms (trauma-related symptoms and moderate to severe depressive symptoms) 3 months after ICU discharge. A multivariate logistic regression model was performed to examine the association between psychiatric symptoms and sleep disturbances. Analyses were controlled for age, hypertension, history of depression, and respiratory failure.
ICU survivors with both trauma-related and depression symptoms (OR 16.66, 95% CI 2.89-96.00) and trauma-related symptoms alone (OR 4.59, 95% CI 1.11-18.88) had a higher likelihood of sleep disturbances. Depression symptoms alone were no longer significantly associated with sleep disturbances when analysis was controlled for trauma-related symptoms.
Trauma-related symptoms and trauma-related plus moderate to severe depressive symptoms were associated with a higher likelihood of sleep disturbances. Future studies are needed to determine whether psychiatric symptoms are associated with objective changes on polysomnography and actigraphy and whether adequate treatment of psychiatric symptoms can improve sleep disturbances.
重症患者的睡眠障碍与较差的长期临床结局和生活质量相关。需要开展研究以更好地描述重症监护病房(ICU)出院后持续性睡眠障碍的关联因素和风险因素。精神疾病常与睡眠障碍相关,但精神症状在ICU幸存者睡眠障碍中的作用尚未得到充分研究。
探讨ICU幸存者精神症状与睡眠障碍之间的关联。
对2011年7月至2016年8月在美国印第安纳州印第安纳波利斯市埃斯凯纳齐医院的ICU幸存者诊所——重症监护康复中心就诊的112名成年ICU幸存者,在ICU出院3个月后评估其睡眠障碍(失眠、嗜睡、入睡困难、睡眠维持困难和日间过度嗜睡)和精神症状(创伤相关症状和中度至重度抑郁症状)。采用多因素逻辑回归模型来探讨精神症状与睡眠障碍之间的关联。分析时对年龄、高血压、抑郁病史和呼吸衰竭进行了校正。
同时有创伤相关症状和抑郁症状的ICU幸存者(比值比[OR]16.66,95%置信区间[CI]2.89 - 96.00)以及仅患有创伤相关症状的幸存者(OR 4.59,95% CI 1.11 - 18.88)出现睡眠障碍的可能性更高。在对创伤相关症状进行校正分析后,仅抑郁症状与睡眠障碍不再显著相关。
创伤相关症状以及创伤相关症状加中度至重度抑郁症状与睡眠障碍的可能性较高相关。未来需要开展研究以确定精神症状是否与多导睡眠图和活动记录仪的客观变化相关,以及对精神症状进行充分治疗是否能改善睡眠障碍。