Journal Article10.1176/APPI.AJP.2008.08010077
Sleep disturbance in bipolar disorder: therapeutic implications.
TL;DR: Given the importance of sleep in all phases of bipolar disorder, appropriate evaluation and management of sleep disturbance in patients with bipolar illness is further detailed.
read more
Abstract: In this review, the authors detail our current understanding of the crucial role that sleep and its disturbances play in bipolar disorder. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that impaired sleep can induce and predict manic episodes. Similarly, treatment of sleep disturbance may serve as both a target of treatment and a measure of response in mania. The depressive phase of bipolar illness is marked by sleep disturbance that may be amenable to somatic therapies that target sleep and circadian rhythms. Residual insomnia in the euthymic period may represent a vulnerability to affective relapse in susceptible patients. Given the importance of sleep in all phases of bipolar disorder, appropriate evaluation and management of sleep disturbance in patients with bipolar illness is further detailed.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Sleep and circadian rhythm disruption in psychiatric and neurodegenerative disease
TL;DR: It is proposed that brain disorders and abnormal sleep have a common mechanistic origin and that many co-morbid pathologies that are found in brain disease arise from a destabilization of sleep mechanisms.
1K
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists clinical practice guidelines for mood disorders
Gin S Malhi,Darryl Bassett,Philip Boyce,Richard A. Bryant,Paul B. Fitzgerald,Kristina Fritz,Malcolm Hopwood,Bill Lyndon,Roger T. Mulder,Greg Murray,Richard J Porter,Ajeet B. Singh +11 more
TL;DR: The Mood Disorder CPG is the first Clinical Practice Guideline to address both depressive and bipolar disorders and provides up-to-date recommendations and guidance within an evidence-based framework, supplemented by expert clinical consensus.
Sleep disturbances and depression: risk relationships for subsequent depression and therapeutic implications.
TL;DR: These findings suggest that sleep-related symptoms that are present before, during, and after a depressive episode are potentially modifiable factors that may play an important role in achieving and maintaining depression remission.
695
Sleep-wake disturbance in interepisode bipolar disorder and high-risk individuals: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review was conducted to compare sleep-wake patterns in people with interepisode bipolar disorder or high-risk individuals vs. normal controls and/or people with primary insomnia.
264
Melanopsin and the Intrinsically Photosensitive Retinal Ganglion Cells: Biophysics to Behavior.
TL;DR: The study of ipRGCs has yielded insight into general topics that include photoreceptor evolution, cellular diversity, and the steps from biophysical mechanisms to behavior.
228
References
Epidemiologic study of sleep disturbances and psychiatric disorders : an opportunity for prevention
TL;DR: As part of the National Institute of Mental Health Epidemiologic Catchment Area study, 7954 respondents were questioned at baseline and 1 year later about sleep complaints and psychiatric symptoms using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule.
2.8K
Sleep disturbance and psychiatric disorders: A longitudinal epidemiological study of young Adults
TL;DR: Prior insomnia remained a significant predictor of subsequent major depression when history of other prior depressive symptoms was controlled for, and complaints of 2 weeks or more of insomnia nearly every night might be a useful marker of subsequent onset of major depression.
1.8K