Relationship between sleep and mood in patients with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder

The relationship between sleep and mood was examined in a longitudinal, naturalistic data set derived from out-patients with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder. Eleven patients completed daily self-ratings of mood and sleep logs for 18 months. Using logistic regression with autoregressive terms, we examined the effect of prior sleep (sleep duration, time of sleep onset, and time of wake onset) on the probability of being in a depressed, manic, or hypomanic episode on one or more subsequent days. Of the three sleep parameters, decreased sleep duration was the best predictor of mania or hypomania the next day, followed by wake onset time. The association between sleep duration and subsequent mood was less consistent for depression than for mania or hypomania. Four of the patients showed no relationship between mood and any of the sleep variables measured. These results reinforce the importance of monitoring, and perhaps controlling, sleep duration and wake onset time in at least some patients with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder.

[1]  M. Strober,et al.  Affective Disorders in Adolescence , 1979 .

[2]  T. Monk,et al.  Delayed sleep phase syndrome: a review of its clinical aspects. , 1995, The American journal of psychiatry.

[3]  S. Koslow,et al.  Somatic symptoms in primary affective disorder. Presence and relationship to the classification of depression. , 1985, Archives of general psychiatry.

[4]  T. Wehr Sleep loss: a preventable cause of mania and other excited states. , 1989, The Journal of clinical psychiatry.

[5]  M. Candito,et al.  Circadian rhythms in depression and recovery: Evidence for blunted amplitude as the main chronobiological abnormality , 1989, Psychiatry Research.

[6]  D. M. White,et al.  Morning vs evening light treatment for winter depression. Evidence that the therapeutic effects of light are mediated by circadian phase shifts. , 1990, Archives of general psychiatry.

[7]  R. Fieve,et al.  Clinical factors in lithium carbonate prophylaxis failure. , 1974, Archives of general psychiatry.

[8]  D. Kupfer,et al.  Hypersomnia and manic-depressive disease. , 1972, The American journal of psychiatry.

[9]  P. Linkowski,et al.  24-hour profiles of adrenocorticotropin, cortisol, and growth hormone in major depressive illness: effect of antidepressant treatment. , 1987, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[10]  David R. Cox The analysis of binary data , 1970 .

[11]  G. Barbato,et al.  Conservation of photoperiod-responsive mechanisms in humans. , 1993, The American journal of physiology.

[12]  F. Goodwin,et al.  Urinary 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol circadian rhythm. Early timing (phase-advance) in manic-depressives compared with normal subjects. , 1980, Archives of general psychiatry.

[13]  S. Zeger,et al.  Markov regression models for time series: a quasi-likelihood approach. , 1988, Biometrics.

[14]  Leora N. Rosen,et al.  Effect of daily variation in weather and sleep on seasonal affective disorder , 1991, Psychiatry Research.