AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the relationship between chronic insomnia and various medical conditions in a diverse group of 772 adults aged 20 to 98.
  • Results indicated that individuals with chronic insomnia experienced higher rates of several health issues, including heart disease, high blood pressure, and chronic pain, while those with these medical problems also reported higher instances of insomnia.
  • The findings highlight a significant overlap between insomnia and medical disorders, suggesting that treating insomnia in patients with specific conditions might improve their overall quality of life, although additional research is necessary to test treatment efficacy.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Determine the comorbidity of insomnia with medical problems.

Design: Cross-sectional and retrospective.

Participants: Community-based population of 772 men and women, aged 20 to 98 years old.

Measurements: Self-report measures of sleep, health, depression, and anxiety.

Results: People with chronic insomnia reported more of the following than did people without insomnia: heart disease (21.9% vs 9.5%), high blood pressure (43.1% vs 18.7%), neurologic disease (7.3% vs 1.2%), breathing problems (24.8% vs 5.7%), urinary problems (19.7% vs 9.5%), chronic pain (50.4% vs 18.2%), and gastrointestinal problems (33.6% vs 9.2%). Conversely, people with the following medical problems reported more chronic insomnia than did those without those medical problems: heart disease (44.1% vs 22.8%), cancer (41.4% vs 24.6%), high blood pressure (44.0% vs 19.3%), neurologic disease (66.7% vs 24.3%), breathing problems (59.6% vs 21.4%), urinary problems (41.5% vs 23.3%), chronic pain (48.6% vs 17.2%), and gastrointestinal problems (55.4% vs 20.0%). When all medical problems were considered together, only patients with high blood pressure, breathing problems, urinary problems, chronic pain, and gastrointestinal problems continued to have statistically higher levels of insomnia than those without these medical disorders.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates significant overlap between insomnia and multiple medical problems. Some research has shown it is possible to treat insomnia that is comorbid with select psychiatric (depression) and medical (eg, pain and cancer) disorders, which in turn increases the quality of life and functioning of these patients. The efficacy of treating insomnia in many of the above comorbid disorders has not been tested, indicating a need for future treatment research.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/30.2.213DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

medical problems
20
insomnia medical
16
problems
14
chronic insomnia
12
high blood
12
blood pressure
12
breathing problems
12
urinary problems
12
chronic pain
12
gastrointestinal problems
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!