Chronic insomnia, REM sleep instability and emotional dysregulation: A pathway to anxiety and depression?

Author:

Riemann Dieter1ORCID,Dressle Raphael J.1ORCID,Benz Fee1ORCID,Spiegelhalder Kai1ORCID,Johann Anna F.12ORCID,Nissen Christoph345,Hertenstein Elisabeth34,Baglioni Chiara6ORCID,Palagini Laura7ORCID,Krone Lukas489ORCID,Perlis Michael L.10,Domschke Katharina111,Berger Mathias1,Feige Bernd1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Center‐University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

2. Institute of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, Faculty of Medicine University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

3. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

4. University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy University of Bern Bern Switzerland

5. Division of Psychiatric Specialties, Department of Psychiatry Geneva University Hospitals (HUG) Geneva Switzerland

6. Human Sciences Department University of Rome Guglielmo Marconi Rome Rome Italy

7. Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Section of Psychiatry University of Pisa Pisa Italy

8. Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, Sir Jules Thorn Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute University of Oxford Oxford UK

9. Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour University of Oxford Oxford UK

10. Department of Psychiatry University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

11. German Center for Mental Health (DZPG) partner site Berlin Berlin Germany

Abstract

SummaryThe world‐wide prevalence of insomnia disorder reaches up to 10% of the adult population. Women are more often afflicted than men, and insomnia disorder is a risk factor for somatic and mental illness, especially depression and anxiety disorders. Persistent hyperarousals at the cognitive, emotional, cortical and/or physiological levels are central to most theories regarding the pathophysiology of insomnia. Of the defining features of insomnia disorder, the discrepancy between minor objective polysomnographic alterations of sleep continuity and substantive subjective impairment in insomnia disorder remains enigmatic. Microstructural alterations, especially in rapid eye movement sleep (“rapid eye movement sleep instability”), might explain this mismatch between subjective and objective findings. As rapid eye movement sleep represents the most highly aroused brain state during sleep, it might be particularly prone to fragmentation in individuals with persistent hyperarousal. In consequence, mentation during rapid eye movement sleep may be toned more as conscious‐like wake experience, reflecting pre‐sleep concerns. It is suggested that this instability of rapid eye movement sleep is involved in the mismatch between subjective and objective measures of sleep in insomnia disorder. Furthermore, as rapid eye movement sleep has been linked in previous works to emotional processing, rapid eye movement sleep instability could play a central role in the close association between insomnia and depressive and anxiety disorders.

Publisher

Wiley

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