Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0917801 (
insomnia
)
10,606
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a postal questionnaire we examined three samples of persons seven and a half months after their migration to Berlin: 1. 512 people having left East Germany, 2. 90 Germans who had left Poland, and 3. 283 people who lived in western parts of Germany before. The present study was to investigate social integration and psychic complaints in these groups. In general, all groups reported increased frequencies of unspecific symptoms like inner restlessness, irritability, nervousness,
rumination
, and
sleeplessness
. In people from the GDR symptoms decreased significantly during the first seven months after migration. Symptoms of people who had come from western parts of Germany increased within this period. Generally the course of symptoms was more favorable, when people found a satisfactory job.
...
PMID:[Psychological symptoms after immigration: a comparison of various groups of immigrants in Berlin]. 149 18
In a study designed to assess personality patterns of patients with chronic
insomnia
, a total of 528 subjects (428 insomniacs and 100 controls) completed the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI). Comparison of the MMPI profiles of insomniacs from a semirural area and of those from an urban area, each in a completely different geographic region, showed results consistent for high levels of psychopathology as well as for specific personality patterns within and between groups. The personality patterns of insomniac subjects were remarkably homogeneous: only a few MMPI code types accounted for about one-half of each insomniac sample. The insomniac profiles were consistently characterized by the presence of neurotic depression,
rumination
, chronic anxiety, inhibition of emotions, and an inability to discharge anger outwardly. The results of this study confirm the original hypothesis that the handling of stresses and conflicts through an internalization of emotions leads to physiologic activation and is a major factor underlying the development and maintenance of chronic
insomnia
.
...
PMID:Biopsychobehavioral correlates of insomnia. II. Pattern specificity and consistency with the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. 662 23
Morning and evening salivary cortisol levels were correlated with sleep parameters in 14 patients with primary
insomnia
and 15 healthy controls. Salivary cortisol was sampled immediately after awakening (T1), 15 min later (T2), and immediately before going to bed (T3) for 1 week at home. In parallel with this, subjects estimated parameters of sleep in a daily sleep log. Patients and controls were all non-smokers who did not differ regarding morning awakening time or bedtime. Cortisol after awakening was significantly decreased in primary
insomnia
. Salivary cortisol at the time of awakening correlated negatively with the subjective estimation of sleep quality, i.e. a low salivary cortisol level directly after awakening correlated with a higher frequency of nightly awakenings (r = -0.50), a diminished sleep quality (r = -0.34) and a decreased feeling of recovery after awakening (r = -0.35; all p < 0.05). Furthermore, awakening cortisol was negatively correlated with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (r = -0.43) and with a questionnaire on sleep-related cognitions with the subscales
rumination
in bed (r = -0.56 ) and focusing on sleep-related thoughts (r = -0.46; all p < 0.05).
...
PMID:Sleep disturbances are correlated with decreased morning awakening salivary cortisol. 1521 42
In this study, we extended previous research by concentrating on sleep- and grief-related symptoms in a cohort of bereaved college students, in view of the potential for each of these problems to exacerbate the other. A sample of 815 college students completed the Inventory of Complicated Grief (H. G. Prigerson & S. C. Jacobs, 2001), along with an assessment of diagnostic criteria for
insomnia
and associated sleep behaviors. As predicted, the rate of
insomnia
was significantly higher (22%) in the bereaved sample than in a nonbereaved comparison group (17%), a difference that was particularly pronounced in terms of middle
insomnia
. Also as hypothesized, bereaved insomniacs reported higher complicated grief scores than bereaved noninsomniacs, and several specific sleep variables (including sleep-onset
insomnia
related to nighttime
rumination
about the loss and sleep-maintenance
insomnia
associated with dreaming of the deceased) were significantly related to complicated grief symptomatology.
...
PMID:Insomnia and complicated grief symptoms in bereaved college students. 1580 60
Rumination
can prolong negative mood, disrupt sleep, and increase depression risk. Although there is evidence that poor sleepers ruminate, no studies have identified the ruminative content relevant for sleep disturbance. This study investigated (a) the association between
rumination
and sleep and (b) the ruminative content of poor sleepers. Results revealed that self-defined poor sleepers (n = 104) were more prone than self-defined good sleepers (n = 139) to ruminate and that the ruminative content was symptom focused (e.g., poor sleepers ruminated on causes of dysphoria, concentration, and fatigue symptoms). As dysphoria, reduced concentration, and fatigue are all commonly experienced daytime symptoms of
insomnia
, this preliminary finding of symptom-focused
rumination
should be further evaluated as a risk factor for further sleep disturbance in clinical samples as well as a possible link between
insomnia
and depression.
...
PMID:Symptom-focused rumination and sleep disturbance. 1708 3
We describe the development of a cognitive therapy intervention for chronic
insomnia
. The therapy is based on a cognitive model which suggests that the processes that maintain
insomnia
include: (1) worry and
rumination
, (2) attentional bias and monitoring for sleep-related threat, (3) unhelpful beliefs about sleep, (4) misperception of sleep and daytime deficits and (5) the use of safety behaviors that maintain unhelpful beliefs. The aim of cognitive therapy for
insomnia
is to reverse all five maintaining processes during both the night and the day. In an open trial 19 patients meeting diagnostic criteria for primary
insomnia
were treated with cognitive therapy for
insomnia
. Assessments were completed pretreatment, posttreatment and at 3-, 6- and 12-month followup. The significant improvement in both nighttime and daytime impairment evident at the posttreatment assessment was retained up to the 12 month followup.
...
PMID:An open trial of cognitive therapy for chronic insomnia. 1758 73
Research and treatment have traditionally adopted a 'disorder-focused' approach by targeting one specific disorder, aiming to understanding its cause, maintenance and treatment. The aim of the present study was to contribute to the burgeoning interest in examining common, or 'transdiagnostic,' processes across disorders. Three candidate transdiagnostic processes involved in emotion regulation -
rumination
, worry, and automatic negative thoughts - were examined in euthymic bipolar I disorder (n=21) and
insomnia
(n=19), and a non-clinical control group (n=20).
Rumination
and worry were endorsed to a larger degree by the bipolar and
insomnia
groups compared to the control group. However, while the bipolar group had more negative automatic thoughts than the control group, there were no significant differences in negative automatic thoughts between the bipolar and
insomnia
groups or the
insomnia
and control groups. These results suggested that
rumination
and worry, but not negative automatic thoughts, might be common across bipolar disorder and
insomnia
. However, these findings no longer remained significant when current symptoms of anxiety and depression were controlled for. Prospective and experimental studies are needed to test the extent to which these processes contribute to the etiology or maintenance of
insomnia
and bipolar disorder.
...
PMID:Transdiagnostic emotion regulation processes in bipolar disorder and insomnia. 1868 36
A recent number of studies have focused on the relations between psychosocial factors and sleep disturbances. Like other work-related stressors, workplace byllying is associated with several negative consequences. However, few studies have investigated the influence of workplace byllying on disturbed sleep.
Insomnia
is the most frequent sleep complaint. Several models have highlighted the importance of cognitive factors in the development and maintenance of
insomnia
. Cognitive styles such as psychological detachment and
rumination
may be relevant in this process. The aim of the present study is to examine the moderating role of psychological detachment and
rumination
on the relationship between workplace byllying and
insomnia
. To minimize the effect of common method variance, we tested our hypothesis using a research design in which we collected data at two points in time separated by 1 month. A total of 523 individuals responded to both phases, with 511 useable surveys. The results of the hierarchical multiple regression analysis provide evidence for the moderating role of psychological detachment and
rumination
in the workplace byllying process. Thus, these findings are in line with the cognitive models of
insomnia
.
...
PMID:[The effect of workplace byllying on insomnia: the role of psychological detachment and rumination]. 1894 80
Research has found that repetitive thought processes, such as worry and
rumination
, play an important role in several disorders; however, these cognitive processes have not yet been examined in
insomnia
. This study explores
rumination
and worry in
insomnia
by examining: 1) whether those high and low on
rumination
and worry differ on subjective sleep measures, and 2) whether
rumination
and worry are distinct processes in
insomnia
. Participants (N=242) were diagnosed with an
insomnia
disorder by sleep experts. Participants completed measures of worry and
rumination
and maintained a 2-week daily sleep log. Results of a multivariate analysis of variance found no main effect of worry; although high and low ruminators differed on several sleep log indices, including sleep efficiency, wakefulness after sleep onset and sleep quality. Factor analysis supported the idea that
rumination
and worry are separate constructs. Whereas previous research has focused on worry in
insomnia
, these findings suggest that
rumination
is important for understanding sleep disturbance. Further, although
rumination
and worry are both repetitive thought processes, these results indicate that they are distinct processes within
insomnia
and should be treated as such. The results are discussed with respect to treatment implications for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for
Insomnia
.
...
PMID:Distinguishing rumination from worry in clinical insomnia. 2036 77
Insomnia
is a prevalent disabling chronic disorder. The aim of this paper is fourfold: (a) to review evidence suggesting that dysfunctional forms of cognitive control, such as thought suppression, worry,
rumination
, and imagery control, are associated with sleep disturbance; (b) to review a new budding field of scientific investigation - the role of dysfunctional affect control in sleep disturbance, such as problems with down-regulating negative and positive affective states; (c) to review evidence that sleep disturbance can impair next-day affect control; and (d) to outline, on the basis of the reviewed evidence, how the repetitive-thought literature and the affective science literature can be combined to further understanding of, and intervention for,
insomnia
.
...
PMID:Cognitive and affective control in insomnia. 2216 71
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>