Sleep Homeostasis in Primary Insomnia Following Behavioral Treatment
About 10% of the population is believed to suffer from Primary Insomnia. It is also believed that people with chronic insomnia have a sleep system that is essentially out of alignment (we call this "homeostatic dysregulation"). We also know that a certain form of non-medication therapy called cognitive-behavioral therapy is a very effective treatment for insomnia. It is not known, however,...
Brief Summary
Official Title: “Sleep Homeostasis in Primary Insomnia Following Behavioral Treatment”
About 10% of the population is believed to suffer from Primary Insomnia. It is also believed that people with chronic insomnia have a sleep system that is essentially out of alignment (we call this "homeostatic dysregulation"). We also know that a certain form of non-medication therapy called cognitive-behavioral therapy is a very effective treatment for insomnia. It is not known, however, whether cognitive-behavioral therapy actually works by bringing the brain's sleep system back into alignment ("sleep homeostasis"). One of the methods used to measure sleep homeostasis is to observe a person's brain waves during sleep and particularly during sleep that follows a period of sleep loss.
The purposes of this study are to first learn whether persons with insomnia do have a misaligned sleep system compared to persons who do not have insomnia by assessing the sleep of people before and after a period of extended sleep loss. Second, the study will determine whether cognitive-behavioral therapy can re-regulate the sleep system and its response to sleep loss. Third, the final purpose is to examine whether the immune system of people with insomnia is more altered following sleep loss than in the comparison group and whether cognitive-behavioral therapy can alter immune function.
- Study Type: Interventional
- Study Design: Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
- Study Primary Completion Date: December 2008
Detailed Clinical Trial Description
Despite the magnitude of the problem of Primary Insomnia, and the good efficacy of Cognitive Behavioral Treatment for Insomnia (CBT-I), little is known about the pathophysiology of insomnia or whether treatment alters the factors that are thought to maintain chronic insomnia. Three main factors have been explored as contributing to chronic insomnia:
hyperarousal, circadian dysrhythmia, and homeostatic dysregulation. Most of the empirical work has been related to the role of hyperarousal along three dimensions: somatic, cognitive, and cortical.
The present study is focused on homeostatic abnormalities and secondarily on hyperarousal as exhibited in subjects with Primary Insomnia (PIs) compared to Good Sleeper controls (GSs).
Homeostatic abnormalities will be assessed by evaluating how patients with insomnia respond to sleep deprivation.
This study will use a Modified Sleep Deprivation and Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSD/MSLT) procedure. Response to the procedure will be assessed in terms of sleep continuity, sleep architecture and electroencephalographic (EEG) power spectral changes during recovery sleep.
Hyperarousal will be evaluated using serial measures of somatic (cortisol) and cortical (EEG Beta/Gamma activity) arousal across the sleep deprivation protocol.
These parameters will be evaluated both prior to and following CBT-I in PIs and following an equivalent time interval in GSs.
Intervention(s) in this Clinical Trial
- Behavioral: Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia
- Insomnia Subjects receive CBT-I
Outcome Measures for this Clinical Trial
Primary Measures
- Mean sleep latency, % total recovery sleep time, and Slow Wave Sleep (SWS) and mean NREM delta power.
- Time Frame: November 2008
Safety Issue?: No
- Time Frame: November 2008
- SWS response to sleep deprivation, and cortical (Beta/Gamma power) and somatic arousal (cortisol).
- Time Frame: November 2008
Safety Issue?: No
- Time Frame: November 2008
- Sleep homeostasis, cortical arousal, and somatic arousal (at Phase 3) in PIs.
- Time Frame: November 2008
Safety Issue?: No
- Time Frame: November 2008
Secondary Measures
- Assessment of circadian distribution of somatic (cortisol) and cortical (Beta/Gamma EEG) arousal in association with sleep deprivation.
- Time Frame: November 2008
Safety Issue?: No
- Time Frame: November 2008
- Evaluation of the 24-hour distribution of somatic (cortisol) and cortical (Beta/Gamma EEG) arousal in PIs.
- Time Frame: November 2008
Safety Issue?: No
- Time Frame: November 2008
Criteria for Participation in this Clinical Trial
Inclusion Criteria:
Primary Insomnia (PI) subjects:
- Difficulty falling or staying asleep for 6 or more months as evidenced by (a) 30 or more minutes to fall asleep on 3 or more nights per week, or (b) early morning awakenings > 30 minutes prior to desired rise time on 3 or more nights per week
- Reported impaired daytime function attributed to insomnia
Good-Sleeper (GS) controls:
- No history of sleep disorders
- No current sleep complaints and/or complaints of daytime fatigue or sleepiness
- Sleep characterized as restorative and relatively "unperturbable"; and will be defined as: 5-15 minutes to fall asleep and no more than two awakenings per night of > 5 minutes duration
Exclusion Criteria:
- Significant medical or psychiatric illness
- Diagnosed or occult sleep disorders (evident on screening PSG) other than PI
- Hearing or memory impairments
- Non-fluency in spoken or written English
- History of head injury (w/ loss of consciousness) or seizures
- Prescription medication or recreational drug use within 4 weeks of laboratory study
- Tobacco use or consume more than 3 cups of coffee per day (or an equivalent dose of caffeine)
Gender Eligibility for this Clinical Trial: Both
Minimum Age for this Clinical Trial: 25 Years
Maximum Age for this Clinical Trial: 55 Years
Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted for this Clinical Trial?: Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Clinical Trial Investigator Information
Lead Investigator: University of Rochester Other
Overall Clinical Trial Officials and Contacts
Wilfred R. Pigeon, Ph.D. Principal Investigator University of Rochester
Additional Information
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on February 12, 2012
Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record. http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00256503
Study ID Number: 33-CA-05
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00256503
Health Authority: United States: Institutional Review Board
Clinical Trials content is provided directly by the U.S. National Institutes of Health via ClinicalTrials.gov and is not reviewed separately by ClinicalTrialsFeeds.org. Every page of specific clinical trials information contains a unique identifier which can be used to find further details directly from the National Institutes of Health.
The URL of this page is:
http://clinicaltrialsfeeds.org/clinical-trials/show/NCT00256503
