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The relationship between sleep disturbance, symptoms and daytime functioning in psoriasis: a prospective study integrating actigraphy and experience sampling methodology.

Authors :
Henry, Alasdair L.
Chisholm, Anna
Carter, Lesley-Anne
Bundy, Christine
Griffiths, Christopher E.M.
Kyle, Simon D.
Source :
Sleep Medicine. Aug2020, Vol. 72, p144-149. 6p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Objective/background: </bold>Sleep disturbance is common in individuals with psoriasis and appears to be related to both physical and psychological factors. We sought to examine whether psoriasis symptoms, night-time arousal and low mood predicted subsequent objective and self-reported sleep; and whether objective and self-reported sleep predicted next-day psoriasis symptoms and day-time functioning.<bold>Participants/methods: </bold>A total of 19 individuals (Female: 11 [57.9%], median age: 39 years) with chronic plaque psoriasis and poor sleep quality (mean Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, PSQI = 9.11) participated. Momentary assessments of psoriasis symptoms, mood and daytime functioning were completed at five pseudo-random intervals each day for 15 days using time-stamped digital diary entry. Objective sleep was estimated using wrist-worn actigraphy. Self-reported sleep and night-time arousal were assessed each morning using validated measures.<bold>Results and Conclusions: </bold>Two-level random intercept models showed that increased night-time arousal was associated with poorer diary-reported sleep. Neither self-reported nor objective sleep parameters were associated with daytime psoriasis symptoms in bi-directional analyses. Diary-reported sleep predicted next-day functioning, specifically sleepiness, concentration, and fatigue. Actigraphy-defined total sleep time predicted next-day fatigue. Night-time arousal is associated with poorer self-reported sleep in people with psoriasis, and sleep predicts next-day functioning. Contrary to our hypothesis, sleep disturbance does not appear to be associated with momentary assessments of psoriasis symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13899457
Volume :
72
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Sleep Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145055510
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2020.03.013