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Insomnia Symptoms and Acute Coronary Syndrome-Induced Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms: A Comprehensive Analysis of Cross-sectional and Prospective Associations.

Authors :
Känel, Roland von
Meister-Langraf, Rebecca E
Pazhenkottil, Aju P
Barth, Jürgen
Schnyder, Ulrich
Schmid, Jean-Paul
Znoj, Hansjörg
Princip, Mary
von Känel, Roland
Source :
Annals of Behavioral Medicine; Oct2021, Vol. 55 Issue 10, p1019-1030, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) induces clinically significant posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) in 12% of patients. Subjective sleep problems are a risk factor for the development of PTSS, but this is underexplored in patients with ACS.<bold>Purpose: </bold>To examine the association of insomnia symptoms with ACS-induced PTSS.<bold>Methods: </bold>In this longitudinal study with 154 patients (all white, 84.4% male, mean age 58.7 years) with a verified ACS, insomnia symptoms were interviewer assessed at hospital admission and at 3 months, using the Jenkins Sleep Scale (JSS)-4. ACS-induced PTSS were assessed with the Clinician-Administered Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Scale 3 months after hospital admission. In multivariable linear models, insomnia symptoms were regressed on PTSS, adjusting for demographics, clinical variables, health behaviors, and psychological data, including cognitive depressive symptoms.<bold>Results: </bold>Greater insomnia symptoms at admission (β = .165, p = .034), greater increase in insomnia symptoms from admission to 3 months (β = .233, p = .008), and greater insomnia symptoms at 3 months (β = .239, p = .002) were independently associated with more severe total PTSS at 3 months. Concerning the individual PTSS clusters, both insomnia symptoms at admission (β = .214, p = .007) and at 3 months (β = .213, p = .012) were independently associated with reeexperiencing symptoms. Removing sleep items from PTSS scores and excluding patients on antidepressants in two sensitivity analyses did not substantially change the results.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Insomnia symptoms could play an important role in the development and severity of ACS-induced PTSS. This relationship seems not simply explained by the fact that sleeping difficulties are inherent to the phenotype of posttraumatic stress disorder.<bold>Clinical Trial Information: </bold>NCT01781247. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08836612
Volume :
55
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Annals of Behavioral Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152885530
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaaa128