Scarpelli Serena, De Santis Alessandra, Alfonsi Valentina, Gorgoni Maurizio, Morin Charles M, Espie Colin, Merikanto Ilona, Chung Frances, Penzel Thomas, Bjorvatn Bjørn, Dauvilliers Yves, Holzinger Brigitte, Wing Yun K, Partinen Markku, Plazzi Giuseppe, De Gennaro Luigi
Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy.
J Sleep Res. 2023 Jun;32(3):e13789. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13789. Epub 2022 Nov 18.
Recent investigations show that many people affected by SARS-CoV2 (COVID-19) report persistent symptoms 2-3 months from the onset of the infection. Here, we report the Italian findings from the second International COVID-19 Sleep Study survey, aiming to investigate sleep and dream alterations in participants with post-acute symptoms, and identify the best determinants of these alterations among patients with long-COVID. Data from 383 participants who have had COVID-19 were collected through a web-survey (May-November 2021). Descriptive analyses were performed to outline the sociodemographic characteristics of long-COVID (N = 270, with at least two long-lasting symptoms) and short-COVID (N = 113, with none or one long-lasting symptom) participants. They were then compared concerning sleep and dream measures. We performed multiple linear regressions considering as dependent variables sleep and dream parameters discriminating the long-COVID group. Age, gender, work status, financial burden, COVID-19 severity and the level of care were significantly different between long-COVID and short-COVID subjects. The long-COVID group showed greater sleep alterations (sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, sleep inertia, naps, insomnia, sleep apnea, nightmares) compared with the short-COVID group. We also found that the number of long-COVID symptoms, psychological factors and age were the best explanatory variables of sleep and oneiric alterations. Our findings highlight that sleep alterations are part of the clinical presentation of the long-COVID syndrome. Moreover, psychological status and the number of post-acute symptoms should be considered as state-like variables modulating the sleep problems in long-COVID individuals. Finally, according to previous investigations, oneiric alterations are confirmed as a reliable mental health index.
近期调查显示,许多感染严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV2,即新冠病毒)的人在感染开始2至3个月后仍有持续症状。在此,我们报告第二次国际新冠病毒睡眠研究调查的意大利研究结果,旨在调查有急性后症状的参与者的睡眠和梦境变化,并确定长期新冠患者中这些变化的最佳决定因素。通过网络调查(2021年5月至11月)收集了383名感染过新冠病毒的参与者的数据。进行描述性分析以概述长期新冠患者(N = 270,至少有两种持续症状)和短期新冠患者(N = 113,无或仅有一种持续症状)的社会人口学特征。然后比较他们在睡眠和梦境测量方面的情况。我们进行了多元线性回归,将区分长期新冠组的睡眠和梦境参数作为因变量。长期新冠患者和短期新冠患者在年龄、性别、工作状态、经济负担、新冠病毒感染严重程度和护理水平方面存在显著差异。与短期新冠组相比,长期新冠组表现出更大的睡眠变化(睡眠质量、日间嗜睡、睡眠惯性、小憩、失眠、睡眠呼吸暂停、噩梦)。我们还发现,长期新冠症状的数量、心理因素和年龄是睡眠和梦境变化的最佳解释变量。我们的研究结果强调,睡眠变化是长期新冠综合征临床表现的一部分。此外,心理状态和急性后症状的数量应被视为调节长期新冠患者睡眠问题的类似状态变量。最后,根据先前的调查,梦境变化被确认为一个可靠的心理健康指标。