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Sleep disorders and non-sleep circadian disorders predict depression: A systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies

Mi-Mi Zhang; Ma, Yan; Lan-Ting Du; Wang, Ke; Li, Zhe; Zhu, Weili; Yu-Hui Sun; Lu, Lin; Yan-Ping Bao; Su-Xia Li*
Social Sciences Citation IndexScience Citation Index Expanded
北京大学; 哈尔滨医科大学; 厦门大学; 1

摘要

Patients with depression often suffer from sleep disorders and non-sleep circadian disorders. However, whether they precede and predict subsequent depression is unclear. We conducted a meta-analysis of studies on sleep disorders and non-sleep circadian disorders. We found insomnia, hypersomnia, short and long sleep duration, obstructive sleep apnea, restless legs syndrome and eveningness orientation at baseline all led to subsequent depression. Those with propensity to late meal patterns, heightened levels of cortisol in awakening response and low robustness of rest-activity rhythm at baseline had higher risks for later depression. Among insomnia subtypes, difficulty initiating sleep and difficulty maintaining sleep predicted future depression. Notably, persistent insomnia at baseline contributed to more than two-fold risk of incident depression compared to insomnia. Moreover, insomnia symptom numbers showed dose-dependent relationship with the incident depression. In conclusion, different types of sleep disorders and non-sleep circadian disorders were proven to be risk factors of subsequent depression, and mechanisms underlying the relationship between sleep disorders, non-sleep circadian disorders and subsequent depression should be further elucidated in the future.

关键词

Depression Circadian rhythm Sleep disorders Insomnia Hypersomnia Obstructive sleep apnea Restless legs syndrome Chronotype Rest-activity rhythm Cortisol Difficulty initiating sleep Difficulty maintaining sleep