| Literature DB >> 29075143 |
Christopher W Drapeau1, Michael R Nadorff1.
Abstract
Sleep disturbances are associated with suicide-related thoughts and behaviors, and the incidence of sleep concerns and suicide has increased recently in the US. Most published research exploring the sleep-suicidality relation is focused on select sleep disorders, with few reviews offering a comprehensive overview of the sleep-suicidality literature. This narrative review broadly investigates the growing research literature on sleep disorders and suicidality, noting the prevalence of suicide ideation and nonfatal and fatal suicide attempts, the impact of several sleep disorders on suicide risk, and potential sleep-disorder management strategies for mitigating suicide risk. Aside from insomnia symptoms and nightmares, there exist opportunities to learn more about suicide risk across many sleep conditions, including whether sleep disorders are associated with suicide risk independently of other psychiatric conditions or symptoms. Generally, there is a lack of randomized controlled trials examining the modification of suicide risk via evidence-based sleep interventions for individuals with sleep disorders.Entities:
Keywords: insomnia; nightmares; sleep; suicidality; suicide; treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075143 PMCID: PMC5609851 DOI: 10.2147/NSS.S125597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Sci Sleep ISSN: 1179-1608
Research reporting prevalence of suicide ideation in youth and adults with insomnia symptoms and sleep disturbance among youth, adult, and older adult suicide attempters (fatal and nonfatal)
| Youth | Adults | Older adults | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence of suicide ideation was around 25% for French adolescents reporting insomnia symptoms. | In a longitudinal study of 405 military veterans meeting criteria for insomnia disorder, 32% reported suicide ideation at baseline. | – | |
| About 7% of French adolescents with insomnia symptoms reported a prior suicide attempt. | About 46% of adult suicide-attempt survivors reported global insomnia symptoms and 92% reported difficulties with either initial, middle, or terminal insomnia. | – | |
| Around 30% of US adolescent suicide decedents experienced insomnia in the week preceding suicide and 32% experienced symptoms around the time of death. | Between 28 and 37% of Japanese suicide decedents experienced initial, middle, or terminal insomnia. | About 11% of Taiwanese suicide decedents had a history of insomnia symptoms. |
Notes: Initial insomnia, sleep-onset difficulty; middle insomnia, sleep-maintenance difficulty; terminal insomnia, early-morning awakening.
Abbreviation: VHA, Veterans Health Administration.
Inconsistencies in insomnia symptoms and suicidality research
| Initial insomnia has been associated with current | |
| Middle insomnia has been independently associated with suicide in youth | |
| Regarding terminal insomnia, a few studies have shown that terminal insomnia is associated with suicide ideation (independently of mood, anxiety, and substance-use disorders), |
Notes: Initial insomnia, sleep-onset difficulty; middle insomnia, sleep-maintenance difficulty; terminal insomnia, early-morning awakening.
Summary of mechanisms examined in the insomnia–suicidality relation
| Proposed mediator | Summary of research |
|---|---|
| Hopelessness had an indirect effect on the insomnia–suicide ideation relation in a cross-sectional sample of US adults, independently of depressive symptoms. | |
| Allan et al | |
| Research has shown that the duration of insomnia symptoms is associated with suicide risk independently of current symptoms of insomnia, depression, anxiety, or PTSD. | |
| In addition to nightmares, it has been proposed by McCall et al that DBAS may explain part of the relation between insomnia symptoms and suicide ideation due to the indirect effect of DBAS approaching significance in their cross-sectional sample of adults with depression. | |
| Nightmares have received increased attention over the past decade with regard to their potential role as a mediator of the insomnia–suicide relation. Research has shown that nightmares are associated with insomnia symptoms, | |
| Insomnia and PTSD-related nightmares have both been proposed as conditions of hyperarousal, | |
| Recent research has examined the indirect effect of thwarted belongingness, a variable included in the suicidal desire component of the IPTS, |
Abbreviations: DBAS, dysfunctional beliefs and attitudes about sleep; PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder; IPTS, interpersonal–psychological theory of suicide.
Prevalence of suicide-related thoughts and behaviors among participants with nightmares and proposed mechanisms of the nightmare–suicidality relation
| Prevalence | |
|---|---|
| In a study of adults with a history of trauma, 62% who experienced nightmares during the past month reported suicide ideation, suicide attempt planning, or a nonfatal suicide attempt, | |
| Some studies have suggested that insomnia symptoms may explain the relation between nightmares and suicide ideation or a suicide-attempt history. An 8-year observational study of adults with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders showed that nightmares were associated with a history of suicide attempts, but only baseline insomnia symptoms were associated with an increased risk of suicide attempt at follow-up, with coexisting insomnia symptoms and nightmares conferring an elevenfold-increased risk for a future suicide attempt. | |
| Hochard et al | |
| Littlewood et al | |
| A cross-sectional study of undergraduates showed that nightmare frequency had an indirect effect on suicide ideation through nightmare distress, independently of insomnia symptoms. | |
| Three studies have examined whether the IPTS could explain the nightmare–suicidality relation, with two studies showing that the full IPTS could not fully account for this relation |
Abbreviation: IPTS, interpersonal–psychological theory of suicide.