Washington, Apr 2 : A new study has discovered that the persistence of insomnia is linked to an increased risk of subsequent depression among individuals suffering from the sleep disorder.
A new study has discovered that the persistence of insomnia is linked to an increased risk of subsequent depression among individuals suffering from the sleep disorder.
The study, led by Jules Angst, MD, of Zurich University Psychiatric Hospital in Switzerland, was conducted on 591 young adults, through six interviews spanning 20 years with an aim to assess their psychiatric, physical, and sleep symptoms.
According to the results, the researchers classified four duration-based subtypes of insomnia: one-month insomnia associated with significant distress, two-to-three-week insomnia, recurrent brief insomnia, and occasional brief insomnia.
The findings indicated that the annual prevalence of one-month insomnia increased gradually over time, with a cumulative prevalence rate of 20 percent and a greater than two-fold risk among women. Insomnia developed into more chronic forms over time in 40 percent of subjects.
It was found that insomnia either with or without comorbid depression was highly stable over time, while insomnia lasting two weeks or longer predicted major depressive episodes and major depressive disorder at subsequent interviews.
The researchers found that 17 to 50 percent of subjects with insomnia lasting two weeks or longer developed a major depressive episode in a later interview.
Besides, the researchers stated that "pure" insomnia and "pure" depression were not longitudinally related to each other, whereas insomnia comorbid with depression was longitudinally related to both.
"We used to think that insomnia was most often just a symptom of depression. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that insomnia is not just a symptom of depression, but that it may actually precede depression. In other words, people who have insomnia but no depression are at increased risk for later developing depression. This study adds to our knowledge by including a much longer follow-up period than most previous studies," said Daniel J. Buysse, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh.
He added: "We were also able to look separately at insomnia alone, depression alone, and combined insomnia-depression. The results show that insomnia seems to be followed by depression more consistently than the other way around. In addition, we found that insomnia tended to be a chronic problem that gets more persistent over time, whereas depression was a more intermittent problem."
Insomnia is a classification of sleep disorders in which a person has trouble falling asleep, staying asleep or waking up too early. It is the most commonly reported sleep disorder. About 30 percent of adults have symptoms of insomnia. It is more common among elderly people and women.
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