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Subjective, But Not Objective Sleep is Associated with Subsyndromal Anxiety and Depression in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Authors :
Rosy Karna
Makoto Kawai
Sophia Pirog
Sophia Miryam Schüssler-Fiorenza Rose
Ruth O'Hara
Nathan Hantke
Josh Jordan
Isabelle Cotto
Rayna B Hirst
Christine E. Gould
Sherry A. Beaudreau
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objective To examine the relationship between subclinical anxiety and depressive symptoms and objective sleep architecture measures and subjective sleep reports in older adults. Methods Community-dwelling older adults (N = 167) self-rated their current severity of anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, daytime sleepiness, and global sleep quality. Participants received overnight ambulatory polysomnography to assess sleep architecture. Multivariate linear regression models examined associations between anxiety and depressive symptoms and objective and subjective sleep measures. Results Significant findings emerged for subjective sleep, with higher depression and anxiety scores associated with worse global sleep quality and greater anxiety scores associated with greater daytime sleepiness. No significant associations were observed between subclinical levels of anxiety or depressive symptoms with sleep architecture. Conclusion Subclinical levels of late-life anxiety and depression have distinct associations with subjective sleep disturbance. Findings implicate subjective measures of sleep quality and daytime sleepiness as stronger trait markers for subthreshold psychiatric symptoms than objective sleep biomarkers.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0fed8f7849fa6a0005adb1e15ae39ee9