Eveningness and poor sleep quality independently contribute to self-reported depression severity in psychiatric inpatients with affective disorder

被引:52
|
作者
Mueller, Matthias Johannes [1 ,2 ]
Kundermann, Bernd [1 ]
Cabanel, Nicole [1 ]
机构
[1] Vitos Clin Ctr Psychiat & Psychotherapy Giessen M, Giessen, Germany
[2] Univ Giessen, Fac Med, Giessen, Germany
关键词
Chronotype; Depression; Eveningness; Insomnia; Sleep quality; MORNINGNESS-EVENINGNESS; REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLE; DAYTIME SLEEPINESS; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; SOCIAL JETLAG; CHRONOTYPE; INSOMNIA; SYMPTOMS; DISTURBANCES; MORNINGNESS/EVENINGNESS;
D O I
10.3109/08039488.2015.1112832
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Background Chronotype and insomnia have been related to the development and to an unfavourable course of depression. However, the mutual relationship of both risk factors is as yet unclear, especially in acute, clinically manifest depressive disorders. Aims The present study was carried out to elucidate the separate direct and indirect influence of chronotype and poor sleep quality on depression severity in patients hospitalized for depression. Methods Depression severity (BDI-II), chronotype (Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire), and subjective sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index total score) were assessed concurrently in inpatients with a depressive syndrome and insomnia during routine treatment. Correlations, multiple regression and bootstrapping methods for testing mediation models were applied to assess the independent direct and indirect effects of chronotype and sleep quality on depression severity, after adjusting for effects of age and gender. Results Data from 57 consecutively admitted patients (88% with major depression) were analyzed (68% women, mean age 41 +/- 13 years). Significant correlations between morningness-eveningness (p<0.05) or sleep quality (p<0.01) and depression severity were found; in a multiple regression model comprising chronotype, sleep quality, age and gender, only chronotype (p<0.05) and sleep disturbances (p<0.01) remained as independent significant concurrent predictors of depression severity (R-2 = 0.184, p<0.01). Two mediation models revealed no significant results. Conclusions Eveningness and poor subjective sleep quality were independently and directly associated with higher depression severity in inpatients with depressive syndromes. Chronotype and sleep quality should be taken into account not only in risk assessment and prevention but also in hospitalized patients to develop and improve treatment options.
引用
收藏
页码:329 / 334
页数:6
相关论文
共 33 条
  • [1] Patterns of self-reported depressive symptoms in relation to morningness-eveningness in inpatients with a depressive disorder
    Mueller, Matthias Johannes
    Olschinski, Christiane
    Kundermann, Bernd
    Cabanel, Nicole
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2016, 239 : 163 - 168
  • [2] Eveningness and poor sleep quality contribute to depressive residual symptoms and behavioral inhibition in patients with bipolar disorder
    Caruso, Danila
    Meyrel, Manon
    Krane-Gartiser, Karoline
    Benard, Victoire
    Benizri, Chloe
    Brochard, Helena
    Geoffroy, Pierre-Alexis
    Gross, Gregory
    Maruani, Julia
    Prunas, Cecilia
    Yeim, Sunthavy
    Palagini, Laura
    Dell'Osso, Liliana
    Leboyer, Marion
    Bellivier, Frank
    Etain, Bruno
    CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2020, 37 (01) : 101 - 110
  • [3] Elusive hypersomnolence in seasonal affective disorder: actigraphic and self-reported sleep in and out of depressive episodes
    Wescott, Delainey L.
    Franzen, Peter L.
    Hasler, Brant P.
    Miller, Megan A.
    Soehner, Adriane M.
    Smagula, Stephen F.
    Wallace, Meredith L.
    Hall, Martica H.
    Roecklein, Kathryn A.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, 2023, 53 (04) : 1313 - 1322
  • [4] Does exercise improve self-reported sleep quality in non-remitted major depressive disorder?
    Rethorst, C. D.
    Sunderajan, P.
    Greer, T. L.
    Grannemann, B. D.
    Nakonezny, P. A.
    Carmody, T. J.
    Trivedi, M. H.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, 2013, 43 (04) : 699 - 709
  • [5] Lifestyle, self-reported morbidities, and poor sleep quality among Brazilian workers
    Hoefelmann, Luana P.
    Lopes, Adair da Silva
    da Silva, Kelly Samara
    da Silva, Shana Ginar
    Cabral, Luciana Gatto A.
    Nahas, Markus Vinicius
    SLEEP MEDICINE, 2012, 13 (09) : 1198 - 1201
  • [6] Self-reported poor quality of sleep in solid organ transplant: A systematic review
    Cordoza, Makayla
    Koons, Brittany
    Perlis, Michael L.
    Anderson, Brian J.
    Diamond, Joshua M.
    Riegel, Barbara
    TRANSPLANTATION REVIEWS, 2021, 35 (04)
  • [7] Depression predicts self-reported sleep quality in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
    Wells, RD
    Day, RC
    Carney, RM
    Freedland, KE
    Duntley, SP
    PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2004, 66 (05): : 692 - 697
  • [8] Self-Reported Sleep Quality Modulates Amygdala Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Anxiety and Depression
    Klumpp, Heide
    Hosseini, Bobak
    Phan, K. Luan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 9
  • [9] Secondhand smoke is associated with poor sleep quality in self-reported never-smokers of Northwest China: a cross-sectional study
    Wang, Lin
    Heizhati, Mulalibieke
    Li, Mei
    Wang, Zhongrong
    Yang, Zhikang
    Abudereyimu, Reyila
    Yang, Wenbo
    Yao, Ling
    Li, Nanfang
    SLEEP AND BREATHING, 2022, 26 (03) : 1417 - 1426
  • [10] Self-reported sleep patterns and quality amongst adolescents: cross-sectional and prospective associations with anxiety and depression
    Orchard, Faith
    Gregory, Alice M.
    Gradisar, Michael
    Reynolds, Shirley
    JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 61 (10) : 1126 - 1137