There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
(1) To describe the prevalence and prospective course of insomnia in a representative
young-adult sample and (2) to describe the cross-sectional and longitudinal associations
between insomnia and depression.
Longitudinal cohort study.
Community of Zurich, Switzerland.
Representative stratified population sample.
None.
The Zurich Study prospectively assessed psychiatric, physical, and sleep symptoms
in a community sample of young adults (n=591) with 6 interviews spanning 20 years.
We distinguished 4 duration-based subtypes of insomnia: 1-month insomnia associated
with significant distress, 2- to 3-week insomnia, recurrent brief insomnia, and occasional
brief insomnia. The annual prevalence of 1-month insomnia increased gradually over
time, with a cumulative prevalence rate of 20% and a greater than 2-fold risk among
women. In 40% of subjects, insomnia developed into more chronic forms over time. Insomnia
either with or without comorbid depression was highly stable over time. Insomnia lasting
2 weeks or longer predicted major depressive episodes and major depressive disorder
at subsequent interviews; 17% to 50% of subjects with insomnia lasting 2 weeks or
longer developed a major depressive episode in a later interview. "Pure" insomnia
and "pure" depression were not longitudinally related to each other, whereas insomnia
comorbid with depression was longitudinally related to both.
This longitudinal study confirms the persistent nature of insomnia and the increased
risk of subsequent depression among individuals with insomnia. The data support a
spectrum of insomnia (defined by duration and frequency) comorbid with, rather than
secondary to, depression.