Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, Australia.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2023;14(2):2202058. doi: 10.1080/20008066.2023.2202058.
Disrupted sleep and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are bi-directionally linked and have been found to mutually reinforce each other on a day-to-day basis. However, most of the previous research has focused on subjective measures of sleep only.
Here, we investigated the temporal relationship between sleep and PTSD symptoms using both subjective (sleep diary) and objective measures of sleep (actigraphy).
Forty-one non-treatment seeking, trauma exposed young adults (age = 24.68, = 8.15) with a range of PTSD symptom severities (PTSS, 0-53 on PCL-5) were recruited. Participants completed two surveys per day over four weeks to measure day-time PTSD symptoms (i.e. PTSS and number of intrusions) and night-time sleep subjectively, while wearing an actigraphy watch to measure sleep objectively.
Linear mixed models revealed that subjectively reported sleep disruptions were associated with elevated next-day PTSS and increasing number of intrusive memories both within and between participants. Similar results were found for daytime PTSD symptoms on night-time sleep. However, these associations were not found using objective sleep data. Exploratory moderator analyses including sex (male vs. female) found that these associations differed in strength between sexes but were generally in the same direction.
These results were in line with our hypothesis with regards to the sleep diary (subjective sleep), but not actigraphy (objective sleep). Several factors which have implications on both PTSD and sleep, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and/ or sleep-state misperception, may be potential reasons behind those discrepancies. However, this study had limited power and needs to be replicated in larger samples. Nonetheless, these results add to the current literature about the bi-directional relationship between sleep and PTSD and have clinical implications for treatment strategies.
睡眠中断和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)之间存在双向关联,并已发现它们在日常基础上相互加强。然而,大多数先前的研究仅关注睡眠的主观测量。
在这里,我们使用睡眠日记(主观测量)和活动记录仪(客观测量)来研究睡眠和 PTSD 症状之间的时间关系。
招募了 41 名非治疗性、创伤暴露的年轻成年人(年龄=24.68,标准差=8.15),他们的 PTSD 症状严重程度(PCL-5 范围为 0-53)各不相同。参与者在四周内每天完成两次调查,以主观地测量白天的 PTSD 症状(即 PTSS 和侵入性记忆的数量)和夜间睡眠,同时佩戴活动记录仪手表来客观地测量睡眠。
线性混合模型显示,主观报告的睡眠中断与第二天 PTSS 升高和侵入性记忆数量增加有关,无论是在参与者内部还是之间。夜间睡眠与白天 PTSD 症状的结果相似。然而,使用客观睡眠数据并未发现这些关联。包括性别(男性与女性)在内的探索性调节分析发现,这些关联在性别之间的强度不同,但总体方向相同。
这些结果与我们关于睡眠日记(主观睡眠)的假设一致,但与活动记录仪(客观睡眠)不一致。几个对 PTSD 和睡眠都有影响的因素,如 COVID-19 大流行和/或睡眠状态感知错误,可能是这些差异的潜在原因。然而,这项研究的效力有限,需要在更大的样本中进行复制。尽管如此,这些结果增加了关于睡眠和 PTSD 之间双向关系的现有文献,并对治疗策略具有临床意义。