Abstract
To systematically assess sleep complaints in panic disorder (PD), the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) was administered to 34 untreated patients with DSM-III-R PD and 34 age-matched healthy controls (HC). PD patients reported significantly more impaired sleep than HC as indicated by higher global index scores on the PSQI (6.9 ± 2.9 versus 3.1 ± 2.0; p < 0.0001) and on four of seven of its subscales; sleep was worst among those PD patients with a prior history of major depression. Sixty-eight percent of patients with PD reported moderately or severely impaired sleep compared to only 15% of HC (x2 = 17.5, p < 0.0005). Twenty-six percent of PD patients- but none of the HC-complained of frequent awakenings in the preceding month because they 'could not breathe comfortably' (Fisher's exact test, p < 0.00625). One-month prevalence of sleep panic in the patients was 18%; lifetime prevalence was 68%. Whereas these findings confirm previous reports of frequent sleep complaints in patients with PD, they also raise the possibility that some of the findings might be trait phenomena attributable to a history of mood disorder.
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Stein, M. B., Chartier, M., & Walker, J. R. (1993). Sleep in nondepressed patients with panic disorder: I. Systematic assessment of subjective sleep quality and sleep disturbance. Sleep, 16(8), 724–726. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/16.8.724
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