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Ambulatory sleep-wake patterns and variability in young people with emerging mental disorders
Authors:Rébecca Robillard  Daniel F. Hermens  Sharon L. Naismith  Django White  Naomi L. Rogers  Tony K.C. Ip  Sharon J. Mullin  Gail A. Alvares  Adam J. Guastella  Kristie Leigh Smith  Ye Rong  Bradley Whitwell  James Southan  Nick Glozier  Elizabeth M. Scott  Ian B. Hickie
Affiliation:Clinical Research Unit, Brain & Mind Research Institute, University of Sydney, Brain & Mind Research Institute, Camperdown NSW, Australia (Robillard, Hermens, Naismith, White, Mullin, Alvares, Guastella, Smith, Withwell, Southan, Glozier, Scott, Hickie); Concord Medical School, The University of Sydney, Concord Centre for Cardiometabolic Health in Psychosis, Hospital Road, Concord NSW, Australia (Rogers, Ip).
Abstract:

Background

The nature of sleep-wake abnormalities in individuals with mental disorders remains unclear. The present study aimed to examine the differences in objective ambulatory measures of the sleep-wake and activity cycles across young people with anxiety, mood or psychotic disorders.

Methods

Participants underwent several days of actigraphy monitoring. We divided participants into 5 groups (control, anxiety disorder, unipolar depression, bipolar disorder, psychotic disorder) according to primary diagnosis.

Results

We enrolled 342 participants aged 12–35 years in our study: 41 healthy controls, 56 with anxiety disorder, 135 with unipolar depression, 80 with bipolar disorder and 30 with psychotic disorders. Compared with the control group, sleep onset tended to occur later in the anxiety, depression and bipolar groups; sleep offset occurred later in all primary diagnosis groups; the sleep period was longer in the anxiety, bipolar and psychosis groups; total sleep time was longer in the psychosis group; and sleep efficiency was lower in the depression group, with a similar tendency for the anxiety and bipolar groups. Sleep parameters were significantly more variable in patient subgroups than in controls. Cosinor analysis revealed delayed circadian activity profiles in the anxiety and bipolar groups and abnormal circadian curve in the psychosis group.

Limitations

Although statistical analyses controlled for age, the sample included individuals from preadolescence to adulthood. Most participants from the primary diagnosis subgroups were taking psychotropic medications, and a large proportion had other comorbid mental disorders.

Conclusion

Our findings suggest that delayed and disorganized sleep offset times are common in young patients with various mental disorders. However, other sleep-wake cycle disturbances appear to be more prominent in broad diagnostic categories.
Keywords:
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