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REM sleep and depressive symptoms in a population‐based study of middle‐aged and elderly persons
Authors:Annemarie I. Luik  Lisette A. Zuurbier  Harry Whitmore  Albert Hofman  Henning Tiemeier
Affiliation:1. Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;2. Section of Endocrinology in the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA;3. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;4. Department of Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Alterations in rapid eye movement sleep have been consistently related to depression in clinical studies. So far, there is limited evidence from population‐based studies for this association of rapid eye movement sleep alterations with depressive symptoms. In 489 participants of the Rotterdam Study, we assessed rapid eye movement sleep latency, rapid eye movement sleep duration and rapid eye movement density with ambulant polysomnography, and depressive symptoms with the Center of Epidemiologic Studies‐Depression Scale. A longer rapid eye movement sleep latency (B = 0.002, = 0.025) and higher rapid eye movement density (B = 0.015, = 0.046) were related to depressive symptoms after age–sex adjustment. When we excluded persons who used sleep medication or medication for the nervous system (= 124), only rapid eye movement density remained related to depressive symptoms (B = 0.018, = 0.027). Our results suggest that rapid eye movement density is a marker of depressive symptoms in the general population, and that associations of rapid eye movement sleep with depressive symptoms are modified by the use of medication.
Keywords:depression  polysomnography  rapid eye movement density  epidemiology
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