| Literature DB >> 28707054 |
Caleb Jeon1, Di Yan2, Mio Nakamura2, Sahil Sekhon2, Tina Bhutani2, Timothy Berger2, Wilson Liao2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Intense nocturnal pruritus as well as the complex pathophysiology of atopic dermatitis (AD) can severely affect sleep and become a major factor in negatively impacting quality of life in adults. However, much of the literature on sleep disturbance in AD patients is on the pediatric population, and it is not well studied in adults. Furthermore, limited studies are available to guide effective management of sleep disturbance in AD in general. We review the literature to present the studies that have investigated the relationship between AD and its effect on sleep in adults and provide an approach for clinicians caring for this population.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Atopic; Dermatitis; Disturbance; Eczema; Sleep
Year: 2017 PMID: 28707054 PMCID: PMC5574743 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-017-0192-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Summary of results of original investigations on sleep disturbance in adults with atopic dermatitis (Sections I–IV)
| References | I. Methods Used to Assess Sleep Disturbance | II. Association of AD with Sleep Disturbance | III. Specific Alterations of Sleep Identified in AD | IV. Association of AD with Impaired Functioning and Quality of Life |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aoki et al. [ | PSG | Scratching mainly occurs in N1 and N2 stages, the act of scratching during sleep brought the patients to a more superficial stage of sleep | ||
| Beikert et al. [ | Subjective surveys, PSQI, DLQI | Significant correlation between PSQI and DLQI | ||
| Bringhurst et al. [ | Actigraphy | The median number of movements during sleep is twice as high in AD vs. controls | ||
| Bender et al. [ | PSQI, actigraphy, PSG | No significant differences in sleep latency in AD vs. controls using PSQI; AD patients slept less, awoke more often, and spent more time awake during waking episodes vs. controls using actigraphy | ||
| Bender et al. [ | PSQI, actigraphy, PSG | Correlation between AD and sleep disturbance | Scratching mainly occurs in N1 and N2 stages, scratching correlates with lower sleep efficiency, no statistically significant difference in sleep efficiency | More daytime dysfunction in AD patients with sleep disturbance vs. control subjects |
| Ebata et al. [ | Video monitoring | Longer durations of scratching and being awake after a scratching bout, patients usually turned over or woke up after a scratching bout | ||
| Ebata et al. [ | PSG, video monitoring | Longer durations of scratching and being awake after a scratching bout in AD vs. controls | ||
| Misery et al. [ | Subjective surveys | No significant correlation between SCORAD and daytime sleepiness | ||
| Noro et al. [ | A novel wristwatch sound detector, overnight video observation | Higher ratio of scratching duration to total sleeping time in AD vs. controls, the mean scratching duration is more than 10 times higher in AD, no significant difference in the mean sleeping time between AD and controls | ||
| Jernelov et al. [ | Subjective surveys | Longer sleep latencies | ||
| Kong et al. [ | Subjective surveys, PSQI, DLQI | Correlation between only the pruritus score of SCORAD and PSQI | Significant correlation between PSQI and DLQI | |
| Sanchez-Perez et al. [ | Subjective surveys | Difficulty falling asleep and waking up from sleep | ||
| Sandoval et al. [ | PSQI, actigraphy | Correlation between AD and sleep disturbance | ||
| Simpson et al. [ | POEM, SCORAD, 5D Pruritus Scale | 68.2% of patients reported itch delayed falling asleep and occasionally or frequently woke them up at night (5D Pruritus Scale); 36.1% reported sleep was disturbed every night (POEM). Sleep was disrupted an average of 4.4 nights over the previous week (POEM); the mean score on the self-reported sleep loss VAS was 4.8 (SCORAD) | ||
| Silverberg et al. [ | Subjective surveys, DLQI | More likely to suffer from insomnia, found association between AD and sleep disturbance using DLQI | AD patients with sleep disturbance had higher numbers of missed workdays, days in bed and doctor visits than those with either AD or sleep disturbances alone | |
| Terreehorst et al. [ | Subjective surveys | Severity of sleepiness has significant negative effect on QoL | ||
| Yano et al. [ | Subjective surveys, PSQI, DLQI | Correlation between SCORAD and PSQI | Subjective sleep quality, latency, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep disturbance, and daytime dysfunction correlate with lower DLQI scores; duration of sleep and sleep medication use do not correlate with DLQI | |
| Yu et al. [ | Subjective surveys, DLQI | Shorter sleep time, trouble falling asleep, nighttime awakenings, early morning awakenings, feeling unrested, feeling overly sleepy, feeling as if they did not get enough sleep, association between AD and sleep disturbance using DLQI | Higher occurrence of leg jerks and leg cramps, no significant association between AD and snoring or cessation of breathing | AD patients who reported being tired were more likely to have difficulty with IADLs |
AD atopic dermatitis, DLQI dermatology life quality index, IADLs instrumental activities of daily living, POEM patient-oriented eczema measure, PSG polysomnography, PSQI Pittsburg Sleep Quality Assessment, QoL quality of life, SCORAD SCORing atopic dermatitis, VAS visual analog scale
The seven components of the Pittsburg Sleep Quality Assessment (PSQI)
| Pittsburg sleep quality assessment (PSQI) |
|---|
| 1. Subjective sleep quality |
| 2. Sleep latency |
| 3. Sleep duration |
| 4. Habitual sleep efficiency |
| 5. Sleep disturbance |
| 6. Use of sleeping medication |
| 7. Daytime dysfunction |
Fig. 1Risk of sleep disturbance in atopic dermatitis according to Yu et al. [17]
Fig. 2Summary of the treatment of sleep in atopic dermatitis (AD) patients from the literature. Asterisk affected by AD. SCORAD SCORing Atopic Dermatitis