Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Am J Addict. 2022 Jan;31(1):37-45. doi: 10.1111/ajad.13219. Epub 2021 Aug 29.
Drug-related dreams are commonly reported by individuals in treatment for substance use disorders, which may be distressing. Existing evidence suggests that dream recollection may be influenced by clinically relevant phenomena, such as opioid use and withdrawal, general sleep disturbance, affective symptoms, and chronic pain. However, very few studies have explored drug-related dreams among individuals who screened positive for opioid use disorder (OUD).
Adults recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) who screened positive for OUD (N = 154) completed a questionnaire about drug-related dreams, as well as measures assessing sleep, opioid use history, stress, anxiety, and chronic pain. χ analyses, one-way analysis of variance, and bivariate correlations, correcting for the false discovery rate, were used as appropriate to explore correlates of (1) recollecting a drug-related dream, and (2) experiencing post-dream craving and distress.
Individuals who recollected a past-week drug-related dream were more likely to report other recent sleep disturbances, including poorer sleep quality, greater insomnia symptoms, and a higher risk for sleep apnea. Post-dream craving and distress were both associated with greater insomnia symptoms, poor sleep hygiene behaviors, and greater anxiety symptoms. Individuals who had ever experienced a drug-related dream (recently, or in their lifetime) were more likely to report a history of severe withdrawal, overdose, and intravenous opioid use.
Drug-related dreams were common among individuals in the present sample and were related to other clinically relevant phenomena. Interventions that treat co-occurring OUD, pain, sleep symptoms, and affective symptoms may improve overall well-being in this population.
药物相关梦境在接受物质使用障碍治疗的个体中经常被报告,这可能令人困扰。现有证据表明,梦境回忆可能受到临床相关现象的影响,例如阿片类药物使用和戒断、一般睡眠障碍、情感症状和慢性疼痛。然而,很少有研究探讨在阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)筛查阳性的个体中药物相关梦境。
从亚马逊 Mechanical Turk (MTurk) 招募的筛查为 OUD 阳性的成年人(N=154)完成了一份关于药物相关梦境的问卷,以及评估睡眠、阿片类药物使用史、压力、焦虑和慢性疼痛的测量。适当使用卡方检验、单因素方差分析和双变量相关性,校正错误发现率,以探索以下因素的相关性:(1)回忆药物相关梦境,(2)梦后渴望和痛苦体验。
回忆过去一周药物相关梦境的个体更有可能报告其他近期睡眠障碍,包括睡眠质量较差、失眠症状更严重,以及睡眠呼吸暂停风险更高。梦后渴望和痛苦都与更严重的失眠症状、不良的睡眠卫生行为和更高的焦虑症状有关。曾经历过药物相关梦境(最近或一生中)的个体更有可能报告严重戒断、过量用药和静脉内阿片类药物使用史。
在本样本中,药物相关梦境很常见,且与其他临床相关现象有关。治疗共病 OUD、疼痛、睡眠症状和情感症状的干预措施可能会改善该人群的整体幸福感。