Circadian phase and phase angle disorders in primary insomnia
Sleep, 2017•academic.oup.com
Objectives We aimed to identify the prevalence of circadian phase and phase angle
abnormalities in patients with insomnia. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional,
multicenter study at three sleep laboratories in the United States and Australia. Patients with
insomnia and healthy control participants completed a sleep log for 7 days. Circadian phase
was assessed from salivary dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) time during a 12-hour
laboratory visit. Results Seventy-nine patients meeting the Research Diagnostic Criteria for …
abnormalities in patients with insomnia. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional,
multicenter study at three sleep laboratories in the United States and Australia. Patients with
insomnia and healthy control participants completed a sleep log for 7 days. Circadian phase
was assessed from salivary dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) time during a 12-hour
laboratory visit. Results Seventy-nine patients meeting the Research Diagnostic Criteria for …
Objectives
We aimed to identify the prevalence of circadian phase and phase angle abnormalities in patients with insomnia.
Methods
We conducted a cross-sectional, multicenter study at three sleep laboratories in the United States and Australia. Patients with insomnia and healthy control participants completed a sleep log for 7 days. Circadian phase was assessed from salivary dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) time during a 12-hour laboratory visit.
Results
Seventy-nine patients meeting the Research Diagnostic Criteria for Primary, Psychophysiological, Paradoxical, and/or Idiopathic Childhood Insomnia (46 females, 35.5 ± 12.3 years [M ± SD]) and 21 controls (14 females, 34.4 ± 11.8 years). As compared to controls, patients with insomnia tried to initiate sleep on average at the same clock time (24:17 ± 1:17 hours vs. 24:13 ± 1:30 hours, respectively; p = .84) but had a later average DLMO times (20:56 ± 1:55 hours, 18:17–01:21 vs. 22:02 ± 2:02 hours, 17:11–04:52, respectively; p = .04). Consequently, patients with insomnia slept at an earlier circadian phase than controls (phase angle, bedtime-DLMO 2:13 hours (± 1:43) vs. 3:10 hours (± 1:08), respectively; p = .008), of whom 10% tried to sleep at or before DLMO (compared to 0 controls), and 22% tried to sleep before or within 1 hour after DLMO (compared to 6% of controls).
Conclusions
A substantial proportion (10%–22%) of patients with insomnia initiate sleep at too early a circadian phase, implicating a circadian etiology for their insomnia. Outpatient circadian phase assessments should be considered to improve differential diagnoses in insomnia and to inform the development of appropriately timed circadian-based treatments.
