Affiliation:
1. University of California
2. Columbia University Irving Medical Center
3. University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio
Abstract
Abstract
Study objectives. Women who experienced childhood sexual abuse have higher rates of obesity, a risk factor for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). We assessed if prior childhood sexual abuse was more common in women with OSA vs. control, with possible mediation by obesity.
Methods. We studied 21 women with OSA (age mean±s.d. 59±12 years, body mass index (BMI) 33±8 kg/m2, respiratory event index [REI] 25±16 events/hour, Epworth Sleepiness Scale [ESS] 8±5) and 21 women without OSA (age 53±9 years, BMI 25±5 kg/m2, REI (in 7/21 women) 1±1 events/hour, ESS 5±3). We evaluated four categories of trauma (general trauma, physical, emotional, and sexual abuse) with the early trauma inventory self-report-short form (ETISR-SF). We assessed group differences in trauma scores with independent samples t-tests and multiple regressions. Parametric Sobel tests were used to model BMI as a mediator for individual trauma scores predicting OSA in women.
Results. Early childhood sexual abuse reported on the ETISR-SF was 2.4 times more common in women with vs. without OSA (p=0.02 for group difference). Other trauma scores were not significantly different between women with and without OSA. However, BMI was a significant mediator (p=0.02) in predicting OSA in women who experienced childhood physical abuse.
Conclusions. Childhood sexual abuse was more common in a group of women with OSA than those without OSA. Additionally, BMI was a mediator for OSA of childhood physical but not sexual abuse. There may be physiological impacts of childhood trauma in women that predispose them to OSA.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference43 articles.
1. Obstructive sleep apnea in cardiovascular disease: a review of the literature and proposed multidisciplinary clinical management strategy;Tietjens JR;Journal of the American Heart Association,2019
2. An epidemiologic study of childhood sexual abuse and adult sleep disturbances;Lind MJ;Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy,2016
3. Childhood abuse as a risk factor for sleep problems in adulthood: evidence from a U.S. national study;Greenfield EA;Ann Behav Med,2011
4. Sleep disturbances in sexual abuse victims: a systematic review;Steine IM;Sleep Med Rev,2012
5. Sleep-disordered breathing, psychiatric distress, and quality of life impairment in sexual assault survivors;Krakow B;The Journal of nervous and mental disease,2002