| Literature DB >> 27988426 |
Nicole D Andorko1, Vijay Mittal2, Elizabeth Thompson1, Danielle Denenny1, Gregory Epstein1, Caroline Demro1, Camille Wilson1, Shuyan Sun1, Elizabeth A Klingaman3, Jordan DeVylder4, Hans Oh5, Teodor T Postolache6, Gloria M Reeves7, Jason Schiffman8.
Abstract
Sleep problems are prominent and pervasive clinical issues experienced by many people with psychotic disorders, often causing distress and functional impairment. Sleep problems are also related to psychosis-like experiences (PLE; non-diagnosable phenomenon such as transient perceptual disturbances, unusual thoughts, periodic suspiciousness) in epidemiological studies. Prior studies in this field have used brief measures that precluded the ability to test (1) whether risk for psychosis-like experiences are related to specific sub-types of sleep disturbance, and (2) whether sleep disturbance is specifically related to clinically significant (i.e., distressing) psychosis-like experiences. The current project examined the relation between specific sleep issues, and PLEs and distress associated with PLEs, in a college sample. Participants (N=420) completed the Prodromal Questionnaire-Brief (PQ-B), which assesses PLEs and associated distress, and the Iowa Sleep Disturbances Inventory - extended version (ISDI-E), which assesses thirteen separate disturbed sleep domains. Symptoms of fragmented sleep, sleep hallucinations, and night anxiety significantly correlated with PLEs, and several sleep domains were significantly associated with PLE-related distress.Entities:
Keywords: Insomnia; Psychosis; Psychosis-like experience; Schizophrenia; Sleep dysfunction
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27988426 PMCID: PMC6540802 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2016.12.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222