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Impact Of Phenotypic Heterogeneity Of Insomnia On The Patients' Response To Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy For Insomnia: Current Perspectives

Insomnia is one of the most common mental disorders and the most frequent sleep disorder encountered in clinical practice, with a prevalence of about 7% in the European population. Insomnia Disorder (ID) is defined as a disturbance of sleep initiation or maintenance, followed by a feeling of non-res...

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Published in:Nature and science of sleep 2019-01, Vol.11, p.367-376
Main Authors: Galbiati, Andrea, Sforza, Marco, Fasiello, Elisabetta, Castronovo, Vincenza, Ferini-Strambi, Luigi
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description Insomnia is one of the most common mental disorders and the most frequent sleep disorder encountered in clinical practice, with a prevalence of about 7% in the European population. Insomnia Disorder (ID) is defined as a disturbance of sleep initiation or maintenance, followed by a feeling of non-restorative sleep and several diurnal consequences ranging from occupational and social difficulties to cognitive impairment. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is considered the first-choice therapy for this disorder because its effectiveness has been proven to be greater in the long term with fewer side effects in comparison to pharmacotherapy. Although its effectiveness has been well established, it has been reported that nearly 40% of patients do not achieve remission after treatment. This finding could be the consequence of heterogeneity of ID between patients. It has been proposed that this heterogeneity might be ascribable to indices that are not related to sleep quality and quantity, such as comorbidities, life events, and personality traits. However, several works focused on the role of sleep markers, in particular objective total sleep time, for the phenotypization of ID and treatment response. The aim of this work is to summarize the available scientific literature regarding the impact of ID subtype on CBT-I response.
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source Open Access: PubMed Central; Publicly Available Content Database; Taylor & Francis Open Access Journals
subjects Analysis
Behavior modification
Behavior therapy
Behavioral medicine
Care and treatment
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Cognitive therapy
cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia
Comorbidity
Hyperactivity
Hypotheses
Insomnia
insomnia disorder
Mental disorders
objective sleep duration
Patients
Personality
Personality traits
Physiology
polysomnography
Quality
Review
Sleep disorders
title Impact Of Phenotypic Heterogeneity Of Insomnia On The Patients' Response To Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy For Insomnia: Current Perspectives
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