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Assessing subjective sleep reports in the first-degree relatives of antidepressant-treated depressed outpatients

✍ Scribed by Andrew G. Mayers; Johanna C. van Hooff; David S. Baldwin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
74 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6222

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

This study sought to investigate whether first‐degree relatives of depressed patients report, and react to, sleep perceptions in the same way as the depressed group. Our previous research suggested that depressed individuals may experience greater sleep ‘distress’ than healthy individuals; we wished to explore whether this was also apparent in their nearest relatives. A sample was recruited of 18 antidepressant‐treated patients with a current DSM‐IV diagnosis of major depressive disorder, 18 healthy controls, and a group of 10 first‐degree relatives for each study group. In accordance with previous findings, poorer sleep perceptions corresponded with poorer life‐quality and mood perceptions, and depressed individuals reported poorer sleep perceptions and poorer life‐quality/mood perceptions than controls. Additionally, there was evidence of similar sleep reporting between depressed patients and their relatives, and for a difference between these relatives and other non‐depressed groups. There was a non‐significant trend for depressed patients, and their relatives, to report total sleep time in the same manner as each other, and differently to other non‐depressed groups. Reports of poor sleep may be associated with reports of poor mood in depression, but in non‐depressed individuals the association may be with a feeling of weariness. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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✍ Andrew G. Mayers; Johanna C. van Hooff; David S. Baldwin 📂 Article 📅 2003 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 69 KB

## Abstract This study sought to establish a method of quantifying subjective perceptions of sleep against perceptions of life‐quality and mood, using amended versions of the Pittsburgh sleep diary (PghSD) and quality of life of insomniacs (QOLI) questionnaire. Diaries and questionnaires were self‐