학술논문

Sleep and Rest-Activity Rhythms in Recovering Patients with Severe Concurrent Mental and Substance Use Disorder: A Pilot Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Dual Diagnosis. Jan-Mar2023, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p26-39. 14p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*PILOT projects
*LENGTH of stay in hospitals
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*IMPULSIVE personality
*CIRCADIAN rhythms
*QUANTITATIVE research
*ACCELEROMETERS
*SLEEP
*SEVERITY of illness index
*SLEEP duration
*AFFECTIVE disorders
*RESEARCH funding
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*OPIOID analgesics
*FATIGUE (Physiology)
*MENTAL illness
Language
ISSN
1550-4263
Abstract
Objective: Mental health and substance use disorders are commonly associated with disrupted sleep and circadian rest-activity rhythms. How these disorders in combination relate to sleep and circadian organization is not well studied. We provide here the first quantitative assessment of sleep and rest-activity rhythms in inpatients with complex concurrent disorders, taking into account categories of substance use (stimulant vs. stimulant and opioid use) and psychiatric diagnosis (psychotic disorder and mood disorder). We also explore how sleep and rest-activity rhythms relate to psychiatric functioning. Methods: A total of 44 participants (10 female) between the age of 20–60 years (median = 29 years) wore wrist accelerometers over 5–70 days and completed standardized questionnaires assessing chronotype and psychiatric functioning (fatigue, psychiatric symptom severity, and impulsiveness). To examine potential influences from treatment, we computed (1) length of stay; (2) days of abstinence from stimulants and opioids as a measure of withdrawal; and (3) a sedative load based on prescribed medications. Results: Participants exhibited a sustained excessive sleep duration, frequent nighttime awakenings, and advanced rest-activity phase related to sedative load. Sleep disruptions were elevated in participants with a history of opioid use. Patients with a psychotic disorder showed the longest sleep and most fragmented and irregular rest-activity patterns. Non-parametric circadian rhythm analysis revealed a high rhythm amplitude by comparison with population norms, and this was associated with greater psychiatric symptom severity. Psychiatric symptom severity was also associated with greater fatigue and later MCTQ chronotype. Conclusions: This pilot study provides initial information on the prevalence and severity of sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances in individuals with severe concurrent disorders. The results underline the need for further studies to start to understand the role of sleep in the disease and recovery process in this understudied population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]