(Press-News.org) Contact information: Lynn Celmer
lcelmer@aasmnet.org
630-737-9700
American Academy of Sleep Medicine
Studies find new links between sleep duration and depression
Sub-optimal sleep may activate depressive genes, increase risk for major depression
DARIEN, IL – A genetic study of adult twins and a community-based study of adolescents both report novel links between sleep duration and depression. The studies are published in the Feb. 1 issue of the journal Sleep.
"Healthy sleep is a necessity for physical, mental and emotional well-being," said American Academy of Sleep Medicine President Dr. M. Safwan Badr. "This new research emphasizes that we can make an investment in our health by prioritizing sleep."
A study of 1,788 adult twins is the first to demonstrate a gene by environment interaction between self-reported habitual sleep duration and depressive symptoms. Results suggest that sleep durations outside the normal range increase the genetic risk for depressive symptoms. Among twins with a normal sleep duration of seven to 8.9 hours per night, the total heritability of depressive symptoms was 27 percent. However, the genetic influence on depressive symptoms increased to 53 percent among twins with a short sleep duration of five hours per night and 49 percent among those who reported sleeping 10 hours per night.
"We were surprised that the heritability of depressive symptoms in twins with very short sleep was nearly twice the heritability in twins sleeping normal amounts of time," said principal investigator Dr. Nathaniel Watson, associate professor of neurology and co-director of the University of Washington Medicine Sleep Center in Seattle, Wash. "Both short and excessively long sleep durations appear to activate genes related to depressive symptoms," added Watson, who also serves on the board of directors of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
According to Watson, the study suggests that optimizing sleep may be one way to maximize the effectiveness of treatments for depression such as psychotherapy.
Another study of 4,175 individuals between 11 and 17 years of age is the first to document reciprocal effects for major depression and short sleep duration among adolescents using prospective data. Results suggest sleeping six hours or less per night increases the risk for major depression, which in turn increases the risk for decreased sleep among adolescents.
"These results are important because they suggest that sleep deprivation may be a precursor for major depression in adolescents, occurring before other symptoms of major depression and additional mood disorders," said principal investigator Dr. Robert E. Roberts, professor of behavioral sciences in the School of Public Health at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, Texas. "Questions on sleep disturbance and hours of sleep should be part of the medical history of adolescents to ascertain risk."
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that about nine percent of adults in the U.S. meet the criteria for current depression, including four percent with major depression. The National Institute of Mental Health reports that depressive disorders have affected approximately 11 percent of U.S. teens at some point during their lives, and three percent have experienced a seriously debilitating depressive disorder.
INFORMATION:
The monthly, peer-reviewed, scientific journal Sleep is published online by the Associated Professional Sleep Societies LLC, a joint venture of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Sleep Research Society. The AASM is a professional membership society that improves sleep health and promotes high quality patient centered care through advocacy, education, strategic research, and practice standards. A searchable directory of AASM accredited sleep centers is available at http://www.sleepeducation.com.
Studies find new links between sleep duration and depression
Sub-optimal sleep may activate depressive genes, increase risk for major depression
2014-02-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Caring for animals may correlate with positive traits in young adults
2014-02-01
NORTH GRAFTON, Mass. (January 31, 2014)—Young adults who care for an animal may have stronger social relationships and connection to their communities, according ...
Dartmouth scientists develop protocol to harvest mouse cell lines for melanoma research
2014-02-01
Dartmouth researchers have developed a protocol that permits cells harvested from melanoma tumors in mice to grow readily in cell culture. Their ...
NASA catches Tropical Depression Kajiki over central Philippines
2014-02-01
Tropical Storm Kajiki developed from the second tropical depression of the Northwestern Pacific Ocean season and quickly moved over the central Philippines. NASA's Aqua satellite passed overhead ...
NASA's Aqua satellite sees System 91S struggling
2014-02-01
NASA's Aqua satellite provided infrared data on System 91S in the Mozambique Channel that showed a system battered by wind shear, stretched out, with broken convection.
A false-colored infrared image was created ...
Dormant prostate cancer cells may be reawakened by factors produced in inflammatory cells
2014-02-01
LOS ANGELES (Jan. 31, 2014) – Researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute discovered in pre-clinical models that dormant prostate cancer ...
Down to EARTH: Interview with Department of the Interior Secretary, Sally Jewell
2014-02-01
Alexandria, VA – EARTH Magazine sits down with Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell to discuss the role of geoscience at the Department of the Interior, including the National ...
What's behind a No. 1 ranking?
2014-02-01
Cambridge, Mass. – January 31, 2014 – Behind every "Top 100" list is a generous sprinkling of personal bias and subjective decisions. Lacking the tools ...
Kessler Foundation MS researchers study predictors of employment status
2014-02-01
West Orange, NJ. January 31, 2014. Researchers at Kessler Foundation have studied the measurement ...
Could your relationship with your mom increase your child's chances of obesity?
2014-01-31
URBANA, Ill. – Could the quality of your attachment to your parents affect your own child's risk for obesity? A new ...
Study reports success in targeted therapy for common form of lung cancer
2014-01-31
BOSTON –– The most common genetic subtype of lung cancer, which has long defied treatment with targeted therapies, has had its growth halted by ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Tiles, leaves and cotton strips for measuring river health
Exploring the relationship between sleep and diet
Sex differences in gambling rats
From charged polymers to life-saving innovations
Building a safer future: 40+ experts chart roadmap to reduce firearm harms by 2040
Society for Neuroscience 2025 early career scientists’ achievements and research awards
Society for Neuroscience 2025 Education and Outreach Awards
Society for Neuroscience 2025 Outstanding Career and Research Achievement Awards
Society for Neuroscience 2025 Promotion of Women in Neuroscience Awards
Kids First releases landmark dataset on rare childhood germ cell tumors
Lichens and drones reveal dinosaur bones
Even modest amounts of physical activity may slow Alzheimer’s disease among at-risk older adults
OHSU researchers identify new tools for early cancer detection, treatment
Trends in daily nicotine vaping and unsuccessful quit attempts in youths
Childhood adversity and all-cause mortality risk
Among youth who vape, USC study finds rise in daily use and difficulty quitting
Antarctic glacier retreated faster than any other in modern history
Unraveling cancer’s neural connections: NIH-funded study investigates how stem cell regulation influences tissue renewal and cancer development
Lightweight multi-wavelength network model for efficient and high-fidelity full-color 3D holographic display
Halide perovskite volatile unipolar Nanomemristor
New foundation model reveals how cells are organized in tissues
Printing with fields: Reprogramming matter at the smallest scales
Reimagine biocatalysis: Turning DNA phosphates into chiral catalysts
Potential of new materials for absorbing 99.5% of light on solar towers demonstrated at the EHU
Dr. Xin Jin named 2026 Peter Gruss Young Investigator
New antibody therapy reawakens immune system to fight pancreatic cancer
David B. Allison, PhD (Baylor College of Medicine), Lauren Hunt PhD, RN, FNP (UCSF), and Arlan Richardson, PhD (University of Oklahoma Health Sciences) to be honored with AFAR annual scientific Awards
145 families receive a diagnosis with new genomic method
Postpartum psychosis: International experts seek to save lives of mothers, babies
Scientists build detailed map of the developing human brain, opening new pathways for Parkinson’s treatment
[Press-News.org] Studies find new links between sleep duration and depressionSub-optimal sleep may activate depressive genes, increase risk for major depression