Abstract

Nightmares influence the mental health of university students, but the prevalence of nightmare and nightmare disorder requires additional documentation. The data of detailed nightmare experience of nightmare disorder and related depressive mood in this population are also scarce. First, a total of 1,451 students in a comprehensive Chinese university were invited to report their nightmare frequency. Sixty-eight patients with nightmare disorder were diagnosed using a semi-structured clinical interview according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.; DSM-5; American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Second, 60 patients with nightmare disorder (8 of 68 patients were dismissed due to data incompletion) and 124 gender-matched, healthy students were invited to answer the Nightmare Experience Questionnaire (NEQ) and the Plutchik-van Praag Depression Inventory (PVP). Of 1,451 students, 923 reported nightmares (its annual prevalence was 63.61%), and 68 were diagnosed with nightmare disorder (its prevalence was 4.69%), with a female preponderance. The mean PVP and four NEQ scale scores in patients were higher than those in healthy students. The PVP scores were correlated with NEQ Physical Effect in patients, and with Negative Emotion in healthy students. This is the first report regarding nightmare disorder prevalence and detailed nightmare experience in university students. The findings of a high prevalence of nightmare disorder in women and elevated scores of nightmare experience among patients in the university population might help address the mechanisms and the management of patients with nightmare disorder.

Highlights

  • At some stages in their life, people may experience nightmares, especially female adolescents or young adults (Schredl & Reinhard, 2011)

  • According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5; American Psychiatric Association, 2013), repeated nightmares associated with significant clinical distress or impairment regarding social/ occupational/other important areas of functioning were symptoms of nightmare disorder

  • We recruited a total of 1,451 students (661 men and 790 women; mean age, 20.36 ± 2.06 [SD] years; age range, 17–28 years), and we asked them to report whether they had nontraumatic nightmare(s) during their lifetime, and if yes, they were further interviewed about the nightmare frequency and its content narrations

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Summary

Introduction

At some stages in their life, people may experience nightmares, especially female adolescents or young adults (Schredl & Reinhard, 2011). Job stress (Kalimo et al, 2000), and work experiences of typical jobs like the cumulation of critical incident–exposure among police officers (Vila, 2006) or death-related experience among nurses (Mealer et al, 2009) were found to be associated with individual nightmare experience. Both neurocognitive model of nightmares supported by neuroimaging results (Marquis et al, 2019) and stress acceleration hypothesis of nightmares supported by neurodevelopmental results (Nielsen, 2017) have been proposed. Frequent nightmares are considered as one of the disturbing sleeping problems in clinics, related to impaired concentration, bad daytime

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