Tillbaka

Institutionen för neurovetenskap, Psykiatri, Uppsala, Sweden.

INSOMNIA
Prevalence, Longitudinal Course and Health Consequences - A Twelve Year Perspective

Disputation: torsdag 16/11 2000 kl. 09.15 i Auditorium Minus, Gustavianum, Uppsala.

ACTA UNIVERSITATIS UPSALIENSIS

Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Medicine 964 Distributor: Uppsala University Library, Box 510, SE-751 20 Uppsala, Sweden

Lena Mallon

Insomnia

Prevalence, Longitudinal Course and Health Consequences - A Twelve Year Perspective

Akademisk avhandling som för avläggande av medicine doktorsexamen i psykiatri vid Uppsala Universitet kommer att offentligt försvaras i Auditorium Minus, Gustavianum, torsdagen den 16 november 2000, kl. 09.15.

ABSTRACT

Mallon, L. 2000. Insomnia. Prevalence, Longitudinal Course and Health Consequences - A Twelve Year Perspective. Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Medicine 964. 66 pp. Uppsala. ISBN 91-554-4835-6

The aim of this thesis is to investigate different aspects of insomnia by following a middle-aged population over a twelve-year period. In the present series of studies insomnia is defined as a complaint of either difficulties initiating sleep (DIS), difficulties maintaining sleep (DMS) or early morning awakenings (EMA).

In 1983 a study of 1,870 subjects aged 45-65 years was performed, based on a questionnaire that focused on sleep and health. Twelve years later, 74.1% of the surviving study population participated in a follow-up study and answered an almost identical questionnaire. The prevalence rate of insomnia at follow-up was 20.4% with a female preponderance. Depression was the variable most consistently related to insomnia while older age was not, when a simultaneous control for the effects of age, gender, depression and anxiety was carried out. A majority of those with insomnia in 1983 also reported insomnia at follow-up. Females complaining of insomnia in 1983 had a four-fold increased risk of being depressed twelve years later independent of depression status at baseline.

Mortality data were collected, and males reporting DIS ran a three-fold increased risk of coronary artery disease mortality over the twelve-year period when adjustment was made for several important risk factors.

In conclusion, insomnia is a highly prevalent and long-lasting complaint and implies a risk for subsequent depression in females. Furthermore, DIS is an important risk factor for coronary artery disease mortality in males.

Key words: Insomnia, Epidemiology, Prospective, Older Adults, Course, Depression, Anxiety, Mortality.

Lena Mallon, Department of Neuroscience, Psychiatry, University Hospital, SE-751 85 Uppsala, Sweden.