Diurnal Rhythm Robustness in Individuals With PTSD and Insomnia and The Association With Sleep.

J Biol Rhythms

Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the diurnal rhythms in individuals with PTSD, insomnia, and healthy controls using actigraphy to measure sleep patterns and disturbances.
  • Both PTSD and insomnia groups showed lower sleep stability and regularity compared to controls, but they had similar average diurnal metrics.
  • Distinct patterns were observed with greater variability in diurnal rhythms among those with PTSD, suggesting a need for targeted interventions to improve their sleep stability.

Article Abstract

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and insomnia are characterized by sleep disturbances and daytime functional impairments. Actigraphy metrics can quantify diurnal rhythms via interdaily stability, intradaily variability, relative amplitude, and sleep regularity. Here, we (a) compared diurnal rhythms in PTSD, insomnia, and healthy control samples using linear mixed modeling; (b) compared inter-individual variability of diurnal rhythms between groups using variance ratio tests; and (c) examined correlations between diurnal rhythms and sleep measures within the clinical samples. Participants ( = 98) wore wrist-activity monitors for one week and completed the Insomnia Severity Index and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Both clinical samples displayed significantly lower interdaily stability, relative amplitude, and sleep regularity compared with controls. Individuals with PTSD and insomnia did not differ on mean diurnal rhythm metrics. Both clinical samples showed more inter-individual variability in relative amplitude compared with controls, and the individuals with PTSD were distinguished from those with insomnia by greater inter-individual variability in interdaily stability and relative amplitude. Relative amplitude in the clinical samples was positively correlated with objective sleep efficiency and total sleep time. This is the first study to compare individuals with PTSD and insomnia on measures of diurnal rhythms, revealing those with PTSD and insomnia to have less robust and more variable diurnal rhythms compared with controls. Individuals with PTSD differed from those with insomnia in inter-individual variability of diurnal rest-activity stability and amplitude, highlighting this population as particularly heterogenous. Diurnal rhythm robustness might be considered an intervention target in insomnia and PTSD populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8794268PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0748730420984563DOI Listing

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