Abstract

ObjectivesTo explore the relationship between nocturnal levels of stress-related hormones and different sleep-wake states in chronic insomnia disorder (CID) patients. MethodsThirty-three CID patients and 34 good sleepers were enrolled and completed assessment of sleep log, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and Insomnia Severity Index. During a-overnight polysomnography monitoring, the patients' vein bleeds were continually collected at different time points (pre-sleep, deep-sleep, 5-min or 30-min waking, and morning waking-up). The control subjects’ bleeds were collected only at 22:00 and morning waking-up. The serum hormones were detected using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. ResultsCompared with at pre-sleep, the level of cortisol was significantly higher at morning waking-up respectively in two-group subjects (Ps < 0.001), with insignificant inter-group differences in cortisol, corticotropin releasing hormone and copeptin at the two time-points. In the patients, the nocturnal secretion curves of three hormones were similar, with the highest concentration at morning waking-up, followed by 30-min waking, 5-min waking, pre-sleep, and deep-sleep. The patients' cortisol (Z = 79.192, P < 0.001) and copeptin (Z = 12.333, P = 0.015) levels were statistically different at different time-points, with higher cortisol at morning waking-up relative to deep-sleep, pre-sleep and 5-min waking (Ps < 0.05), and at 30-min waking relative to deep-sleep and pre-sleep (Ps < 0.05), and higher copeptin at morning waking-up relative to deep-sleep (P < 0.05). ConclusionsIn CID, the nocturnal wakes were instantaneously accompanied by high level, and deep sleep was accompanied by the lowest levels, of stress-related hormones, especially in cortisol, supporting the insomniac hypothesis of increased nocturnal pulse-release of cortisol.

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