Abstract

Over the past 60 years, the impact of psychotropic drugs on dream recall and content has been scarcely explored. A review of the few existing experimental results on the topic leads us to the following conclusions. For antidepressant drugs, in the great majority, they reduce dream recall frequency (DRF), and the improvement of depressive symptoms is associated with an increase of positive emotion in dream content. For sedative psychotropic drugs, their improvement of sleep quality is associated with a reduction of DRF, but the effect on dream content is less clear. Few occurrences of nightmare frequency increase have been reported, with intake of molecules disturbing sleep or with the withdrawal of some psychotropic drugs. Importantly, the impact of psychotropic drugs on rapid eye movement (REM) sleep does not explain DRF modulations. The reduction of intra-sleep awakenings seems to be the parameter explaining best the modulation of DRF by psychotropic drugs. Indeed, molecules that improve sleep continuity by reducing intra-sleep awakenings also reduce the frequency of dream recall, which is coherent with the “arousal-retrieval model” stating that nighttime awakenings enable dreams to be encoded into long-term memory and therefore facilitate dream recall. DRF is nonetheless influenced by several other factors (e.g., interest in dreams, the method of awakening, and personality traits), which may explain a large part of the variability of results observed and cited in this article.

Highlights

  • Dreaming is an experience shared by everyone; very few people report having never dreamt [e.g., [1, 2]]

  • Molecules that improve sleep continuity by reducing intra-sleep awakenings reduce the frequency of dream recall, which is coherent with the “arousal-retrieval model” stating that nighttime awakenings enable dreams to be encoded into long-term memory and facilitate dream recall

  • Sleep disorders and complaints about dreams and nightmares are common in depressed individuals [25], only few studies have tested at the experimental level the effects of antidepressants on dream recall [see [26], for a review proposing a table with the antidepressant tested and their effect on dreams in depressed and healthy individuals]

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Summary

KEY POINTS

- Most antidepressants reduce dream recall frequency. Dream content tends to improve in parallel to improvements in symptoms of depression. - Sedative psychotropic drugs reduce dream recall frequency by improving sleep quality, but their impact on dream content is not well-known. - The influence of psychotropic drugs on REM sleep does not modify their impact on dream recall frequency. - Decrease of intra-sleep awakenings due to taking psychotropic drugs is the variable, which most correlates with dream recall frequency

INTRODUCTION
DREAM RECALL
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor
Tricyclic Antidepressants
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor
Inhibitor Antidepressants
Other Antidepressants
EFFECTS OF ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS ON DREAM RECALL
EFFECTS OF ANXIOLYTIC AND HYPNOTIC DRUGS ON DREAM RECALL
Antipsychotic drugs
EFFECT OF MOOD STABILIZERS ON
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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