Suppr超能文献

一项关于睡眠中性行为的病例对照研究:与精神共病和人际关系困难密切相关。

A case-control study of sexualised behaviour in sleep: A strong association with psychiatric comorbidity and relationship difficulties.

机构信息

Sleep Research Unit, The University of Edinburgh, Department of Sleep Medicine, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, 51 Little France Crescent, Edinburgh, EH16 4SA, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

Sleep Research Unit, The University of Edinburgh, Department of Sleep Medicine, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, 51 Little France Crescent, Edinburgh, EH16 4SA, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK; Department of Neurology, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, DD1 9SY, Scotland, UK.

出版信息

Sleep Med. 2023 Mar;103:33-40. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2023.01.019. Epub 2023 Jan 24.

Abstract

UNLABELLED

Sexualised behaviour in sleep (SBS) is a relatively rare parasomnia consisting of instinctive behaviours of a sexual nature occurring during non-rapid-eye movement (NREM) sleep. Little information exists at present regarding the clinical features and onset of this condition as well as its link to psychiatric comorbidity, other sleep disorders and history of adverse early life experience. Aims were to typify the condition further and compare features of SBS patients to those with other NREM parasomnias.

METHODS

Details of 335 consecutive patients presenting to a single tertiary sleep centre with non-rapid eye movement (NREM)-parasomnias over a 15-year period (2005-2020) were examined. Data were collated by reviewing case-notes for anthropometric data, past medical history, clinical findings, and video polysomnography. SBS patients were compared to a cohort of 270 non-SBS, NREM-sleep disorder patients (case-control) to ascertain whether they had any distinguishing features from other parasomnias classified in this group.

RESULTS

Sixty-five patients with SBS were identified: 58 males, 7 females (comprising 19.4% of the cohort overall). Mean age at presentation was 33(±9.5) years. Onset of behaviours was commoner in adulthood in the SBS cohort, whereas non-SBS, NREM-parasomnia onset (n = 270) was commoner in childhood: 61.1% and 52.9% respectively (p = 0.007). An association was identified between the presence of psychiatric diagnoses and onset of SBS (p = 0.028). Significant triggers for SBS behaviours included alcohol consumption (p < 0.001), intimate relationship difficulties (p = 0.009) and sleep deprivation (p = 0.028). Patients with SBS were significantly more likely to report sleepwalking as an additional NREM behaviour (p < 0.001). Males were more likely to present at clinic together with their bedpartner and females presented alone. A history of SBS appeared to be more common in those working in the armed forces or the police compared to those presenting with non-SBS, NREM-parasomnias (p = 0.004).

CONCLUSIONS

SBS is more common in clinical practice than previously described and presents with some distinguishing features within the NREM disorder category. This study is the first to identify that onset in childhood or lack of amnesia does not preclude the condition and that patterns of presentation differ between men and women. Sleepwalkers particularly should be asked about SBS. Comorbid psychiatric conditions, profession and intimate partner difficulties are strong determinants of the presentation.

摘要

目的

进一步对该病症进行分类,并比较 SBS 患者与其他 NREM 睡眠障碍患者的特征。

方法

对 15 年来(2005-2020 年)在单一三级睡眠中心就诊的 335 例非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠障碍患者的临床资料进行回顾性分析。通过查阅病历,对患者的人体测量数据、既往病史、临床发现和视频多导睡眠图进行了数据采集。将 SBS 患者与 270 例非 SBS、NREM 睡眠障碍患者(病例对照)进行比较,以确定他们是否有与其他在该组中分类的睡眠障碍不同的特征。

结果

共发现 65 例 SBS 患者,其中男性 58 例,女性 7 例(占总人数的 19.4%)。发病时的平均年龄为 33(±9.5)岁。在 SBS 组中,行为发作更常见于成年期,而非 SBS、NREM 睡眠障碍(n=270)的发作更常见于儿童期:分别为 61.1%和 52.9%(p=0.007)。精神病诊断的存在与 SBS 的发作之间存在关联(p=0.028)。SBS 行为的显著触发因素包括饮酒(p<0.001)、亲密关系困难(p=0.009)和睡眠剥夺(p=0.028)。SBS 患者更有可能报告梦游作为另一种 NREM 行为(p<0.001)。男性更有可能与他们的床伴一起到诊所就诊,而女性则独自就诊。与非 SBS、NREM 睡眠障碍患者相比,SBS 患者在军队或警察工作的比例更高(p=0.004)。

结论

SBS 在临床实践中比以前描述的更为常见,并且在 NREM 障碍类别中具有一些独特的特征。这项研究首次发现,儿童期发病或无记忆障碍并不能排除该疾病,而且男女之间的发病模式不同。特别应询问梦游者是否有 SBS。合并的精神疾病、职业和亲密伴侣的困难是发病的重要决定因素。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验