Association Between Sleep and Vertigo Severity in Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo: Mediating Role of Psychological Factors.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Nature and Science of Sleep Pub Date : 2025-06-23 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.2147/NSS.S529355
Juanli Xing, Xinyu Xu, Hongying Shan, Jiaqian Wu, Peiyu Liu, Wenyan Shi, Peihua Ren, JinLing Liu, Yuge Huang, Baibing Mi
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Abstract

Objective: To investigate the relationship between sleep quality and vertigo severity among patients with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and to elucidate the mediating effects of anxiety and depression on this association.

Methods: We analyzed baseline data from an ongoing cohort study of 1056 BPPV patients in Northwest China. Vertigo severity was assessed using the Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI), sleep quality was measured with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and psychological states were evaluated using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), Self-rating Anxiety Scale (SAS), and Self-rating Depression Scale (SDS). Multiple regression and mediation analysis were conducted to explore the relationships between sleep quality, psychological factors, and vertigo severity.

Results: Robust correlations were demonstrated between total PSQI scores and all DHI subscales (p < 0.001). Multivariate ordered logistic regression revealed that patients exhibiting sleep disorders manifested a substantially elevated risk of severe vertigo compared to those without (OR: 2.024; 95% CI: 1.571-2.608). Psychological factors emerged as significant mediators in this relationship, with anxiety accounting for 28.5% of the mediation effect, depression contributing 38%, and HADS mediating 37.7% of the association. A pronounced dose-response relationship was noted, with increased risk of vertigo severity as PSQI scores exceeded 7.

Conclusion: This study shows a strong correlation between poor sleep quality and increased vertigo severity in BPPV patients, with anxiety and depression as significant mediators. These findings emphasize the need to address sleep-related factors and psychological symptoms in BPPV management, suggesting integrated sleep therapy and psychological interventions.

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良性阵发性位置性眩晕患者睡眠与眩晕严重程度的关系:心理因素的中介作用。
目的:探讨良性阵发性体位性眩晕(BPPV)患者睡眠质量与眩晕严重程度的关系,并探讨焦虑和抑郁在这一关系中的中介作用。方法:我们分析了中国西北地区1056例BPPV患者的基线数据。采用头晕障碍量表(DHI)评估眩晕严重程度,采用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)测量睡眠质量,采用医院焦虑抑郁量表(HADS)、焦虑自评量表(SAS)和抑郁自评量表(SDS)评估心理状态。采用多元回归和中介分析探讨睡眠质量、心理因素与眩晕严重程度的关系。结果:PSQI总分与所有DHI分量表之间存在显著相关性(p < 0.001)。多变量有序logistic回归显示,有睡眠障碍的患者发生严重眩晕的风险明显高于无睡眠障碍的患者(OR: 2.024;95% ci: 1.571-2.608)。心理因素在这一关系中成为显著的中介因素,焦虑占28.5%的中介效应,抑郁占38%,HADS占37.7%。注意到明显的剂量-反应关系,当PSQI评分超过7分时,眩晕严重程度的风险增加。结论:本研究显示BPPV患者睡眠质量差与眩晕严重程度增加有很强的相关性,其中焦虑和抑郁是重要的中介因素。这些发现强调了在BPPV管理中需要解决睡眠相关因素和心理症状,建议将睡眠治疗和心理干预相结合。
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来源期刊
Nature and Science of Sleep
Nature and Science of Sleep Neuroscience-Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
245
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Nature and Science of Sleep is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal covering all aspects of sleep science and sleep medicine, including the neurophysiology and functions of sleep, the genetics of sleep, sleep and society, biological rhythms, dreaming, sleep disorders and therapy, and strategies to optimize healthy sleep. Specific topics covered in the journal include: The functions of sleep in humans and other animals Physiological and neurophysiological changes with sleep The genetics of sleep and sleep differences The neurotransmitters, receptors and pathways involved in controlling both sleep and wakefulness Behavioral and pharmacological interventions aimed at improving sleep, and improving wakefulness Sleep changes with development and with age Sleep and reproduction (e.g., changes across the menstrual cycle, with pregnancy and menopause) The science and nature of dreams Sleep disorders Impact of sleep and sleep disorders on health, daytime function and quality of life Sleep problems secondary to clinical disorders Interaction of society with sleep (e.g., consequences of shift work, occupational health, public health) The microbiome and sleep Chronotherapy Impact of circadian rhythms on sleep, physiology, cognition and health Mechanisms controlling circadian rhythms, centrally and peripherally Impact of circadian rhythm disruptions (including night shift work, jet lag and social jet lag) on sleep, physiology, cognition and health Behavioral and pharmacological interventions aimed at reducing adverse effects of circadian-related sleep disruption Assessment of technologies and biomarkers for measuring sleep and/or circadian rhythms Epigenetic markers of sleep or circadian disruption.
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