AI Article Synopsis

  • - Psoriasis is a long-term inflammatory condition that significantly impacts both physical and mental health, and recent evidence suggests it leads to sleep disruption; however, there is a lack of strong empirical data on this topic.
  • - A systematic review of 32 relevant studies showed that while 93.7% reported some level of sleep disturbance in psoriasis patients, many studies had flaws like using non-validated measurements and inadequate sample sizes.
  • - The review concluded that the varied rates of sleep disturbance make it hard to establish clear patterns, emphasizing the need for better-designed studies with validated sleep measures to better understand this issue in psoriasis patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Psoriasis is a long-term immune-mediated inflammatory disorder mainly, but not only, affecting skin, and is associated with significant medical and psychological morbidity. Evidence suggests that sleep is disrupted in psoriasis, however high quality empirical evidence is lacking. Given the importance of sleep for health, characterisation of sleep disruption in psoriasis is an important goal. We therefore conducted a systematic review of the sleep-psoriasis literature.

Methods: Searches were conducted in Pubmed, SCOPUS and Web of Science from inception to May 2016. Studies were compared against inclusion/exclusion criteria and underwent a quality evaluation. Given the heterogeneity of studies, we conducted a narrative synthesis of the findings.

Results: Searches revealed 32 studies which met our predetermined inclusion/exclusion criteria. Whilst 93.7% of studies reported sleep disruption in this population, ranging from 0.05% to 85.4%, many had important methodological shortcomings. Over half of all quantitative studies (54.8%; 17/31) relied on non-validated measures, contributing to heterogeneity in study findings. In those that employed valid measures, assessing sleep was often not the primary objective. We frequently found the absence of adequate sample size calculations and poor statistical reporting.

Conclusion: This review showed that in psoriasis, reported sleep rates of sleep disturbance varied substantially. Most studies lacked a hypothesis driven research question and/or failed to use validated measures of sleep. We were unable to draw firm conclusions about the precise prevalence and nature of sleep disturbance within the psoriasis population. We offer suggestions to help advance understanding of sleep disturbance in psoriasis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4915697PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0157843PLOS

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