2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2015.12.001
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A systematic review of sleep disturbance in anxiety and related disorders

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Cited by 287 publications
(187 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, findings support the notion that sleep dysfunction is transdiagnostic and etiologically linked to various forms of psychopathology due in part to shared neurobiology between sleep systems and emotion regulation (Cox & Olatunji, ; Harvey, Murray, Chandler, & Soehner, ). That said, there was no comparative healthy control group or cohort comprising participants with sleep dysfunction but not psychopathology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Furthermore, findings support the notion that sleep dysfunction is transdiagnostic and etiologically linked to various forms of psychopathology due in part to shared neurobiology between sleep systems and emotion regulation (Cox & Olatunji, ; Harvey, Murray, Chandler, & Soehner, ). That said, there was no comparative healthy control group or cohort comprising participants with sleep dysfunction but not psychopathology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Findings are in line with reports that poor sleep is a risk factor in the development and maintenance of mood disorders (Ford & Kamerow, ; Gillin, ; Gregory et al., ). Problematic sleep has also been shown to exacerbate symptom severity (Cox & Olatunji, ) and may reflect the general influence sleep has on the capacity to regulate emotions (Gruber & Cassoff, ). In further support of close ties between mood and sleep, 40–50% of individuals who suffer from sleep difficulties have a concurrent psychiatric disorder (Ford & Kamerow, ; Gillin, ; Gregory et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Youth in the poor sleep group were more likely to have MDD than those in the other groups, and by middle adolescence (ages 14-16) those in the poor group were also more likely to have an anxiety disorder and DBD. Because sleep disturbances are diagnostic criteria for MDD (American Psychiatric Association, 2013), and frequently occur in anxiety disorders and DBD (Cox & Olatunji, 2016; Aronen, Lampenius, Fontell, & Simola, 2014), it may be that those youth were identified as poor sleepers as a consequence of this psychopathology, just as much as poor sleep may have contributed to the likelihood of having these disorders. While we are unable to determine the direction of effect in these analyses because assessments at each age are cross-sectional, future longitudinal work should aim to do so.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first analyses used least squares regressions to examine the direct effects on psychopathology risk of: (1) SleepDur (i.e., the linear term of sleep duration, centered); (2) the squared (i.e., quadratic term) value of SleepDur (SleepDurSq) because both short (Cox & Olatunji, ; Zhai et al., ) and long sleep (Patel et al., ; van Mill et al., ; Zhai et al., ) are related to psychopathology risk, and (3) indicator variables for morning‐type and evening‐type preferences (intermediate type = reference group). We then performed separate mediation analysis on PHQ‐2 and GAD‐7 scores, using only those sleep variables with significant direct effects from the first analysis.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%