| Literature DB >> 25279939 |
Matthias Zunhammer1, Peter Eichhammer2, Volker Busch2.
Abstract
Academic exam stress is known to compromise sleep quality and alter drug consumption in university students. Here we evaluated if sleeping problems and changes in legal drug consumption during exam stress are interrelated. We used the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) to survey sleep quality before, during, and after an academic exam period in 150 university students in a longitudinal questionnaire study. Self-reports of alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine consumption were obtained. The Perceived Stress Questionnaire (PSQ-20) was used as a measure of stress. Sleep quality and alcohol consumption significantly decreased, while perceived stress and caffeine consumption significantly increased during the exam period. No significant change in nicotine consumption was observed. In particular, students shortened their time in bed and showed symptoms of insomnia. Mixed model analysis indicated that sex, age, health status, as well as the amounts of alcohol and caffeine consumed had no significant influence on global sleep quality. The amount of nicotine consumed and perceived stress were identified as significant predictors of diminished sleep quality. Nicotine consumption had a small-to-very-small effect on sleep quality; perceived stress had a small-to-moderate effect. In conclusion, diminished sleep quality during exam periods was mainly predicted by perceived stress, while legal drug consumption played a minor role. Exam periods may pose an interesting model for the study of stress-induced sleeping problems and their mechanisms.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25279939 PMCID: PMC4184882 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Histogram of time-points of acquisition.
Participants were recruited in winter semester 2011 and summer semester 2012. Lecture periods within these semesters were 17. Okt.2011-11. Feb.2012 and 16. Apr.2012–21. Jul.2012.
Sleep quality and legal drug consumption before, during and after an exam period.
| Pre-Baseline | ExamPeriod | Post-Baseline | Friedman’s Statistic | ||
| n | n = 139 | n = 122 | n = 117 | (df = 2, n = 106) | |
| Variable | Mean ± SD | X2 F, | Post-Hoc | ||
|
| |||||
| Bedtime (Daytime ± h) | 23∶47±1.11 | 23∶50±1.32 | 00∶01±1.70 | – | – |
| Waketime (Daytime ± h) | 08∶06±1.25 | 07∶58±1.42 | 08∶40±2.66 | – | – |
| Time in Bed (h) | 8.31±0.96 | 8.14±1.11 | 8.65±1.22 | 12.54** | B** |
| Sleep Onset Latency (min) | 19.6±23.0 | 24.3±21.8 | 17.8±18.5 | 20.50*** | B** |
| % of Cases with Sleep Onset Latency ≥30 min | 22.3% | 34.4% | 18.8% | – | – |
| Reported Sleep Time (h) | 7.35±1.01 | 7.10±1.04 | 7.84±1.21 | 17.53*** | B** |
| Sleep Efficiency Sub-Scale | 0.42±0.68 | 0.57±0.96 | 0.37±0.85 | 5.42n.s | – |
| Sleep Efficiency in % | 88.7±0.1% | 87.9±0.1% | 90.6±0.1% | 13.99** | B*, C* |
| Subjective Sleep Quality | 0.43±0.68 | 0.57±0.96 | 0.37±0.85 | 40.75*** | A**, B*** |
| % of Cases with Very Good/Fairly Good/FairlyBad/Very Bad Sleep Quality | 27.3/61.2/10.1/1.4% | 7.4/66.4/23.0/3.3% | 31.6/62.4/5.1/0.9% | – | – |
| Hypnotics use: | 0.02±0.15 | 0.04±0.27 | 0.02±0.18 | – not enough cases | |
| Daytime Dysfunction/Sleepiness Score | 1.03±0.75 | 1.28±0.75 | 0.81±0.73 | 28.19 *** | B ***, C * |
| Sleep Disturbance Sub-Scale | 0.99±0.32 | 0.97±0.34 | 0.90±0.40 | 3.85 | – |
| PSQI Global Score | 4.95±2.53 | 6.25±2.82 | 4.10±2.39 | 47.43 *** | A ***, B ***, C * |
| % of Cases with PSQI >5 | 34.5% | 53.3% | 21.4% | – | – |
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| Regensburg Insomnia Scale (RIS) | 7.12±4.93 | 8.79±5.51 | 6.24±3.96 | 29.06*** | A**, B*** |
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| Caffeine (Cups) | 4.76±5.67 | 7.10±9.51 | 4.56±5.52 | 25.88 *** | A **, B ** |
| Nicotine (Cigarettes) | 7.24±25.54 | 7.19±29.12 | 5.39±20.75 | 0.45 n.s. | – |
| Alcohol (drinks) | 5.94±6.31 | 3.42±4.42 | 6.29±7.88 | 19.16 *** | A **, B * |
| % of Cases with Acute Infections, Injuries,or Exacerbations of Pre-Existing Conditions | 18.7 | 8.2 | 18.8 | – | – |
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| Perceived Stress Scale (PSQ-20) | 33.68±17.62 | 54.06±19.34 | 29.62±18.24 | 98.34*** | A***, B***, C* |
Higher PSQI scores denote lower sleep quality. Friedman’s test statistic (X2 F) was used to determine changes in PSQI and drug intake over time.
Abbreviations: Post-hoc differences are denoted as “A”: between Pre-Baseline and Exam Period, “B”: between Exam Period and Post-Baseline, and “C”: between Pre- and Post-Baseline. n.s.: not significant. * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001.
Figure 2PSQI global scores plotted against consumed amounts of alcohol (2a), caffeine (2b), and nicotine (2c), as well as PSQI global scores plotted against perceived stress (2d) within the last week.
Perceived stress and the amount of nicotine consumed were identified as significant predictors of PSQI global score. Alcohol and caffeine did not predict PSQI global score significantly.
Mixed model results: predictors of sleep quality.
| Model Parameter | Units |
| 95% CI (lower) | 95% CI (upper) |
|
| Cohen’s |
|
| Mean PSQI Score at Post-Baseline | 4.50 | 3.76 | 5.24 | 11.95 | <.001 | |
|
| Dummy coded contrast with Post-Baseline | 0.60 | 0.18 | 1.02 | 2.82 |
| 0.040† |
|
| Dummy coded contrast with Post-Baseline | 0.62 | 0.08 | 1.16 | 2.26 |
| 0.040† |
|
| Female | −0.20 | −0.87 | 0.46 | −0.60 | .548 | 0.001 |
|
| Years | −0.034 | −0.171 | 0.102 | −0.50 | .620 | 0.000 |
|
| Ill/injured compared to healthy | −0.36 | 0.24 | −0.96 | −1.19 | .237 | 0.010 |
|
| Drinks/week | −0.030 | −0.070 | 0.010 | −1.47 | .142 | 0.021 |
|
| Units/week | 0.026 | −0.011 | 0.063 | 1.39 | .165 | 0.005 |
|
| Cigarettes/week | 0.020 | 0.007 | 0.032 | 3.16 |
| 0.018 |
|
| Score (mean centered) | 0.054 | 0.042 | 0.067 | 8.47 |
| 0.140 |
Estimated unstandardized coefficients () of the mixed model, with corresponding t-tests against the null-hypothesis of no effect. The mixed model included a random intercept term for each participant. Positive beta values indicate an increase in PSQI score and therefore a decrease in sleep quality. All co-variates were mean-centered. †Value represents effect size of factor time.