4.5 Article

Subjective but Not Objective Sleep is Associated with Subsyndromal Anxiety and Depression in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 806-811

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2018.03.010

Keywords

Anxious; depressive; polysomnography; daytime sleepiness; sleep quality

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIMH RO1070886]
  2. Department of Veteran Affairs Sierra-Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education, Clinical Center (MIRECC) and Spinal Cord Injury Service, the Office of Academic Affiliations, Advanced Fellowship Program in Mental Illness Research and Treatment
  3. Office of Academic Affiliations Advanced Fellowship Program in Spinal Cord Injury Medicine
  4. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs [IK2 RX001478]
  5. National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health [K23AG053465]
  6. American Sleep Medicine Foundation, a foundation of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine

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Objective: To examine the relationship between subclinical anxiety and depressive symptoms and objective sleep architecture measures and subjective sleep reports in older adults. Methods: Community-dwelling older adults (N = 167) self-rated their current severity of anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, daytime sleepiness, and global sleep quality. Participants received overnight ambulatory polysomnography to assess sleep architecture. Multivariate linear regression models examined associations between anxiety and depressive symptoms and objective and subjective sleep measures. Results: Significant findings emerged for subjective sleep, with higher depression and anxiety scores associated with worse global sleep quality and greater anxiety scores associated with greater daytime sleepiness. No significant associations were observed between subclinical levels of anxiety or depressive symptoms with sleep architecture. Conclusion: Subclinical levels of late-life anxiety and depression have distinct associations with subjective sleep disturbance. Findings implicate subjective measures of sleep quality and daytime sleepiness as stronger trait markers for subthreshold psychiatric symptoms than objective sleep biomarkers.

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