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A Study of Insomnia and Sleep Loss
Author Bio
Part I
Part II
Currently selected section: Using a Stress Framework
Protocol Design
SNS Activation
Sleep Misperception and Loss
Insomnia and Performance Testing
Insomnia and Emotional Arousal
Yoked Control Design
Effects of Sleep Loss
Insomnia and Somatic Symptoms
Conclusion
 
 
 
 


Chapter 15: Challenges to the Study of Insomnia and Sleep Loss: Searching for Explanatory Features of Insomnia: Using a Stress Framework
        


Photograph of woman sitting on bed, experiencing sleeplessness.Studies of insomnia have been conducted most often using comparative descriptive designs where the correlates of insomnia are measured in people reporting insomnia (or poor sleep) and compared to those reporting good sleep (control subjects). Differentiation of correlates that are antecedents to versus those that are consequences of poor sleep is elusive. This means the conceptual or theoretical perspectives about insomnia are obscure. However, much of the science related to insomnia can be seen as fitting a stress framework: the interface of mind and body.

Negative changes in sleep quality in people not previously experiencing insomnia consistently accompany circumstances of profound physical and emotional/mental distress and environmental duress (e.g. divorce or bereavement and major catastrophes). Furthermore, sleep difficulties have been long recognized in the face of emotional disorders such as depression and anxiety disorders (Lustberg and Reynolds, 2000; Thase, 2000) as well as with somatoform, personality, obsessive-compulsive, and posttraumatic stress disorders (Pillar et al., 2000; Mellman, 1997).

As previously mentioned, insomnia is also highly associated with major physical illness. While the pathologies involved in major disease processes might affect physiologic sleep regulation mechanisms, it is difficult to separate such hypothetical mechanisms from the similarly plausible--and intimately related--physical effects brought on by the psychological distress of "being sick."

Stress is an ill-defined scientific term but is a concept that represents the interface of mind and body. Viewpoints in this field include that stressors are those environmental elements that provoke emotional arousal and physiological activation adjustments to defend against or be protected from harm or adapt to novel circumstances within one's environment. While minor stressors occur daily, the more intense ones generally represent perceived or real threats to one's integrity or status within one's environment, e.g. impending injury or job loss. The dominant physiological activation pattern associated with exposure to stressful circumstances, whether social or physical, largely involves up-regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and sympathetic nervous system (SNS). The neuroendocrine components most often assessed include corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), vasopressin, and cortisol (humans) or corticosterone (rats). Metabolic or neurotransmitter-related correlates of norepinephrine and epinephrine system activity are also used.

SNS activation drives a catabolic enhancement of metabolic state. Adjustments to stressors are seen to be adaptive when they occur only episodically with a short timeline of dissipation. Intense or continuous exposure to stressors and/or a biological propensity towards chronic up-regulation of the stress state is seen as negative for health.

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