Haudrich Elizabeth A, Burns Emily K, Gupta Tina, Haas Gretchen L, Horton Leslie E
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 3811 O'Hara St, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States of America; Department of Psychology, Ohio University, 22 Richland Ave, Athens, OH 45701, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 3811 O'Hara St, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States of America; Graduate School of Professional Psychology, University of Denver, 2450 S Vine St, Denver, CO 80210, United States of America.
Schizophr Res. 2024 Dec;274:535-544. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2024.10.024. Epub 2024 Nov 24.
Cumulative research finds that exposure to childhood trauma, sleep dysfunction, and high stress levels are prevalent in youth diagnosed with and at-risk for psychotic disorders. However, few studies have investigated the association between nightly sleep and moment-to-moment stress in youth who are at familial high-risk (FHR) for psychotic disorders with varying levels of exposure to childhood trauma. The current study examined the day-to-day associations between trauma severity, nightly sleep duration, and next-day momentary stress in 19 FHR and 19 non-psychiatric youth (ages 13-19 years, 66 % girls). Ecological Momentary Assessment was used to assess these variables across three longitudinal timepoints (baseline, 6-months, and 12-months). The FHR group reported greater trauma severity and shorter sleep duration than the non-psychiatric group. In the whole sample, trauma severity and reduced sleep duration were associated with next-day momentary stress. While group status did not moderate the association between sleep duration and next-day momentary stress, group status did moderate the positive association between trauma severity and next-day momentary stress, showing that the association was specific to the non-psychiatric group. Lastly, the effect of nightly sleep duration on next-day momentary stress was significant and negative, but only at low levels of trauma severity for the whole sample. Findings offer preliminary insights into the associations between trauma severity, sleep duration, and momentary stress. Furthermore, this design can provide a foundation for future research examining environmental and psychosocial risk factors that contribute to symptom progression and prognosis of youth who are genetically vulnerable to psychosis.
累积研究发现,童年创伤、睡眠功能障碍和高压力水平在被诊断患有精神障碍及有患精神障碍风险的青少年中普遍存在。然而,很少有研究调查在有不同程度童年创伤暴露的、患精神障碍家族高风险(FHR)的青少年中,夜间睡眠与即时压力之间的关联。本研究考察了19名FHR青少年和19名非精神疾病青少年(年龄13 - 19岁,66%为女孩)的创伤严重程度、夜间睡眠时间与次日即时压力之间的日常关联。采用生态瞬时评估在三个纵向时间点(基线、6个月和12个月)评估这些变量。FHR组报告的创伤严重程度更高,睡眠时间比非精神疾病组更短。在整个样本中,创伤严重程度和睡眠时间缩短与次日即时压力相关。虽然组状态并未调节睡眠时间与次日即时压力之间的关联,但组状态确实调节了创伤严重程度与次日即时压力之间的正相关,表明这种关联特定于非精神疾病组。最后,夜间睡眠时间对次日即时压力的影响显著且为负,但仅在整个样本创伤严重程度较低时如此。研究结果为创伤严重程度、睡眠时间和即时压力之间的关联提供了初步见解。此外,这种设计可为未来研究考察导致对精神病具有遗传易感性的青少年症状进展和预后的环境及心理社会风险因素奠定基础。