4.6 Article

Treating chronobiological components of chronic insomnia

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 637-644

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2006.10.003

Keywords

circadian rhythm; sleep onset insomnia; early morning awakening insomnia; advanced sleep phase syndrome; delayed sleep phase syndrome; insomnia treatments

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Circadian rhythms have a strong effect on the ability to sleep across the 24-h period. Maximum sleepiness occurs at the phase of lower endogenous core body temperature. This period is bracketed by two periods of alertness: a wake-maintenance zone occurring 6-10 h before the time of core temperature minimum, and a wake-up zone occurring 4-7 h after the minimum. Therefore, if the circadian rhythm drifts earlier with respect to the attempted sleep period, the wake-up zone can impinge on the end of the normal sleep period resulting in premature awakening and the development of early morning awakening insomnia. Similarly, a delay of the circadian rhythm can impose the wake-maintenance zone on the attempted bedtime and lead to sleep onset insomnia. Therefore, these two types of insomnia should be treatable with chronobiologic effects such as bright light and, possibly, melatonin administration. Bright light stimulation at normal wake-up time and melatonin administration 4-8 h before normal bedtime can phase advance circadian rhythms to an earlier time. While morning bright light has been efficacious for sleep onset insomnia, evening melatonin administration has yet to be tested. Early morning awakening insomnia has been treated with phase delays imposed by evening bright light but not yet with morning melatonin administration. There is now sufficient evidence to warrant the consideration of chronobiologic manipulations such as bright light therapy for the treatment of chronic sleep onset and early morning awakening insomnia that show evidence of circadian delay or advance, respectively. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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