Rady Ahmed, Mekky Jaidaa, Moulokheya Tarek, Elsheshai Ahmed
Department of Psychiatry, Alexandria University School of Medicine, Alexandria, Egypt.
Department of Neurology, Alexandria University School of Medicine, Alexandria, Egypt.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2020 Dec 22;16:3187-3196. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S284337. eCollection 2020.
Substance abuse is a complex issue requiring multi-disciplinary management. Protracted abstinence syndrome leads to persistent discomfort even after detoxification lasting months, resulting in poor sleep duration and quality. Despite being a major contributor to relapse and sleep disturbances, no objective assessment procedures to monitor sleep after the detoxification have been reported. The study aims to assess sleep structure after detoxification via polysomnography and psychometrically assess sleep over the next 6 months in abstinent and relapsing patients.
Sixty successfully detoxified males (35.8 ± 7.3 years) with a history of heroin abuse (DSM-V) (mean composite scores (ASI): 1.3 ± 0.06, 3.48 ± 0.38, 5.45 ± 0.63, 1.2 ± 0.19, 3.93 ± 0.9, and 2.61 ± 0.8 for medical status, employment/support status, alcohol/drugs status, legal status, family/social relationships, and psychiatric status, respectively) were recruited immediately following their detoxification, without giving additional psychoactive substances or medications. Polysomnography was done in the second week following detoxification to allow washout of medications, followed by a monthly sleep assessment through sleep diary and daytime sleepiness using a visual analog scale. Relapse was proved by a urine test. Polysomnographic parameters and ASI subscales for relapsing and non-relapsing participants were compared using a 2-tailed Student's -test (p<0.05).
Eighteen participants relapsed by 6 months (12 by 3 months). Only the ASI legal problems score was significantly different for the two groups (p=0.001). The differences were significant for NREM stages I (p=0.001) and II (p=0.002), bilateral limb movement (p=0.009), and arousal indices (p=0.001).
Measuring polysomnographic parameters (percentage of NREM I and II, arousal index, and limb movement index) for sleep disturbance in detoxified heroin-abuse patients can be potential predictors for relapse in a 6-month follow-up.
药物滥用是一个复杂的问题,需要多学科管理。即使在持续数月的戒毒后,稽延性戒断综合征仍会导致持续不适,从而使睡眠时长和质量变差。尽管稽延性戒断综合征是导致复吸和睡眠障碍的主要因素,但尚未有关于戒毒后监测睡眠的客观评估程序的报道。本研究旨在通过多导睡眠图评估戒毒后的睡眠结构,并从心理测量学角度评估戒断和复吸患者在接下来6个月的睡眠情况。
招募60名成功戒毒的男性(年龄35.8±7.3岁),他们有海洛因滥用史(符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版标准)(平均综合评分(成瘾严重程度指数):医疗状况为1.3±0.06,就业/支持状况为3.48±0.38,酒精/药物状况为5.45±0.63,法律状况为1.2±0.19,家庭/社会关系为3.93±0.9,精神状况为2.61±0.8),在他们戒毒后立即招募,不给予额外的精神活性物质或药物。在戒毒后的第二周进行多导睡眠图检查,以便药物排出体外,随后通过睡眠日记和使用视觉模拟量表评估日间嗜睡情况进行每月一次的睡眠评估。通过尿液检测证实是否复吸。使用双侧t检验比较复吸和未复吸参与者的多导睡眠图参数和成瘾严重程度指数分量表(p<0.05)。
18名参与者在6个月内复吸(12名在3个月内复吸)。两组之间只有成瘾严重程度指数的法律问题得分有显著差异(p=0.001)。在非快速眼动睡眠I期(p=0.001)和II期(p=0.002)、双侧肢体运动(p=0.009)以及觉醒指数(p=0.001)方面差异显著。
测量戒毒后海洛因滥用患者睡眠障碍的多导睡眠图参数(非快速眼动睡眠I期和II期的百分比、觉醒指数和肢体运动指数)可能是6个月随访中复吸的潜在预测指标。