Hyperarousal dynamics reveal an overnight increase boosted by insomnia

  • Lara Rösler*
  • , Erik Jan van Kesteren
  • , Jeanne Leerssen
  • , Glenn van der Lande
  • , Oti Lakbila-Kamal
  • , Jessica C. Foster-Dingley
  • , Anne Albers
  • , Eus JW van Someren
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Hyperarousal is a key symptom of anxiety, stress-related disorders, and insomnia. However, it has been conceptualized in many different ways, ranging from various physiological markers (e.g. cortisol levels, high-frequency EEG activity) to personality traits, or state assessments of subjective anxiety and tension. This approach resulted in partly inconsistent evidence, complicating unified interpretations. Crucially, no previous studies addressed the likely variability of hyperarousal within and across days, nor the relationship of such variability in hyperarousal with the night-by-night variability in sleep quality characteristic of insomnia. Here, we present a novel data-driven approach to understanding dynamics of state hyperarousal in insomnia. Using ecological momentary assessment, we tracked fluctuations in a wide range of emotions across 9 days in 169 people with insomnia disorders and 38 controls without sleep problems. Exploratory factor analysis identified a hyperarousal factor, comprised of items describing tension and distress. People with insomnia scored significantly higher on this factor than controls at all timepoints. In both groups, the hyperarousal factor score peaked in the morning and waned throughout the day, pointing to a potential contributing role of sleep or other circadian processes. Importantly, the overnight increase in hyperarousal was stronger in people with in insomnia than in controls. Subsequent adaptive LASSO regression analysis revealed a stronger overnight increase in hyperarousal across nights of worse subjective sleep quality. These findings demonstrate the relationship between subjective sleep quality and overnight modulations of hyperarousal. Disorders in which hyperarousal is a predominant complaint might therefore benefit from interventions focused on improving sleep quality.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)279-285
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Psychiatric Research
Volume179
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024

Funding

This work was supported by the European Research Council Advanced Grant 101055383 OVERNIGHT and the BIAL grant 253/2022.

FundersFunder number
European Research Council253/2022, 101055383

    Keywords

    • Actigraphy
    • Ecological momentary assessment
    • Exploratory factor analysis
    • Hyperarousal
    • Insomnia
    • Sleep quality

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