| Literature DB >> 26649857 |
Krzysztof Krysta1, Marek Krzystanek2, Agnieszka Bratek3, Irena Krupka-Matuszczyk3.
Abstract
Many psychiatric disorders, like schizophrenia, affective disorders, addictions and different forms of dementia are associated with sleep disturbances. In the etiology and course of those diseases inflammatory processes are regarded to be an increasingly important factor. They are also a frequently discussed element of the pathology of sleep. In this literature review reports on correlations between poor sleep and inflammatory responses in various psychiatric conditions are discussed. The link between schizophrenia, affective disorders and inflammatory cytokines is a complex phenomenon, which has been already confirmed in a number of studies. However, the presence of sleep deficits in those conditions, being a common symptom of depression and psychoses, can be an additional factor having a considerable impact on the immunological processes in mental illnesses. In the analyzed data, a number of studies are presented describing the role of inflammatory markers in sleep disturbances and psychopathological symptoms of affective, psychotic, neurogenerative and other disorders. Also attention is drawn to possible implications for their treatment. Efforts to use, e.g., anti-inflammatory agents in psychiatry in the context of their impact on sleep are reported. The aspect of inflammatory markers in the role of sleep deprivation as the treatment method in major depressive disorder is also discussed. A general conclusion is drawn that the improvement of sleep quality plays a crucial role in the care for psychiatric patients.Entities:
Keywords: Inflammatory markers; Psychiatric disorders; Sleep
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26649857 PMCID: PMC5281642 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-015-1492-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
Studies on inflammatory markers in schizophrenia, depression, addictions, dementia, reaction to severe stress, adjustment disorders and psychosomatic disorders complicated sleep disturbances
| Authors (year) | Study group | Inflammatory factor | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prather et al. ( | 95 non-depressed hepatitis C patients | IFN-alpha, IL-6 | High levels of inflammation and poor sleep quality may be risk factors for IFN-alpha induced depression |
| Motivala et al. ( | 22 patients with depressive disorder | IL-6, sICAM, MCP-1, IL-6sR | Nocturnal elevations of IL-6 and sICAM associated with sleep disturbance in depressed patients |
| Appelberg et al. ( | 20 drug-free patients with acute non-affective psychoses | IL-1β in plasma | Negative correlation between IL-1β and the length of sleep period and of REM sleep |
| Nishino et al.( | 14 unmedicated schizophrenic patients | Prostaglandin D2, E2, F2α and corticotropin releasing factor in cerebrospinal fluid | No correlations between inflammatory factors and sleep parameters |
| Heffner et al. ( | 45 women and 38 men aged 50 years and older undergoing acute stress | IL-6 | Poor sleepers had significantly larger IL-6 responses to the cognitive stressors than good sleepers |
| Von Känel et al. ( | 64 older caregivers of people with AD | IL-6, D-dimer | Poor sleep was associated with higher plasma IL-6 and D-dimer levels |
| Chen et al. ( | 43 drug-free AD patients | IL-1β and TNF-α | Daytime sleepiness in mild and moderate AD patients is associated with elevation of serum TNF-α |
| Redwine et al. ( | 24 alcoholic patients | IFN-gamma, IL-10, IL-6, NK cells | Disordered sleep contributes to immune alterations in patients with chronic alcoholism |
| Irwin et al. ( | 16 abstinent African American alcoholics | IL-6 and TNF | Circulating levels of proinflammatory cytokines may have a negative influence on sleep initiation |
| Heffner et al. ( | 25 adults with chronic low back pain | IL-6 | In adults with chronic low back pain poorer sleep quality was associated with higher IL-6 levels |