Abstract

BackgroundPeople with psychotic disorders demonstrate a wide spectrum of sleep abnormalities. Abnormalities include changes in total sleep time, increased sleep onset latency, increased wake-up time after sleep onset and abnormalities in sleep architecture. The study aimed to characterize the sleep difficulties in a large sample of persons with psychotic disorders and to examine association with age and gender.MethodsAltogether, 5046 persons with a major psychiatric disorder (schizophrenia: 2972, schizoaffective disorder: 640, bipolar disorder: 1097 and psychotic depression: 330) and aged 18–80 participated in a nationwide Super project. The Finnish SUPER (Finnish acronym for “Finnish study on genetic mechanisms of psychotic disorders”) study is a part of the international Stanley Global Neuropsychiatric Genomics Initiative. The results were compared with a representative general population sample of 8018 adults (Health 2000). Sleep was assessed in a self-report questionnaire. In the present study we used total sleep time, tiredness (defined as feeling more tired than other people of the same age during day time at least weakly, yes/no), difficulties in getting sleep without sleep medication often or almost daily (yes/no) and early morning or night awakenings occurring either often or nearly every night (yes/no).ResultsLong sleep (> 10h) was most common in persons with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder reported by approximately 30% when age was 18–40. The corresponding proportion was approximately 15% in persons with bipolar disorder or psychotic depression and less than 1% in the general population. Tiredness, difficulties in getting sleep and early morning or night awakenings were reported most by persons with bipolar disorder and psychotic depression, but also persons with schizophrenia reported those more than the general population in people with under 60 years of age. Schizoaffective disorder was between schizophrenia and affective psychoses in the sleep variables. In persons over 60, the difference between the groups was smaller than in persons under 60 years of age, because sleeping long and tiredness decreased in all patient groups, and difficulties getting sleep and awakenings increased in the general population sample more than in psychosis patients.DiscussionSleep disorders seem to be prominent in persons with major psychiatric disorders. Tiredness was common in all diagnosis groups. Long sleep was most common in schizophrenia and difficulties in getting sleep and early morning or night awakenings in affective psychoses. More research is needed on possibilities to prevent and treat sleep disorders in major psychiatric disorders.

Highlights

  • People with psychotic disorders demonstrate a wide spectrum of sleep abnormalities

  • The standardized mortality ratio (SMR), the age-adjusted ratio of the number of observed deaths in this study sample to that expected in the general population, was 2.57

  • Natural cause mortality was predicted in a multivariate model by baseline cigarette smoking (RR=6.29, 95% CI 1.41, 3.72, p=0.00076); divorced or widowed status (RR=1.90, CI 1.21, 2.99); reduced cognitive score (RR=0.73, CI 0.61, 0.87); receipt of antidepressant medication (RR=1.74, CI 1.12, 2.71); elevated levels of antibodies to Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) (RR=1.29, CI 1.01, 1.66); and a genitourinary (RR 1.82, CI 1.16, 2.86), respiratory (RR 1.82, CI 1.16, 2.86), or cardiac (RR 2.09, CI 1.33, 3.29) condition

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Summary

Results

A total of 6.8% (87/1287) of persons died of natural causes. There were 70 deaths in the schizophrenia and 17 in the bipolar disorder participants. Discussion: Multiple factors contribute to the excess mortality of persons with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, but cigarette smoking is a major preventative cause. Methods: Altogether, 5046 persons with a major psychiatric disorder (schizophrenia: 2972, schizoaffective disorder: 640, bipolar disorder: 1097 and psychotic depression: 330) and aged 18–80 participated in a nationwide Super project. Results: Long sleep (> 10h) was most common in persons with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder reported by approximately 30% when age was 18–40. Difficulties in getting sleep and early morning or night awakenings were reported most by persons with bipolar disorder and psychotic depression, and persons with schizophrenia reported those more than the general population in people with under 60 years of age.

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