Investigating the dynamic relations between maternal sleep and depression across pregnancy

Melissa Nevarez-Brewster , Anna M. Zhou , Jenalee R. Doom , Benjamin L. Hankin , Elysia Poggi Davis
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Abstract

Background

Sleep problems and depression symptoms are highly prevalent and dynamic during pregnancy with impacts on both maternal and offspring health. However, few studies have examined their bidirectional relations across pregnancy to determine whether sleep is an independent predictor of later depression symptoms, and vice versa. The purpose of this study is to investigate the dynamic relations between prenatal maternal sleep problems and depression symptoms three times across pregnancy.

Method

Pregnant participants (n = 222) recruited in early pregnancy completed sleep and depression questionnaires at around 17-, 28-, and 35-weeks’ gestation. Prenatal maternal sleep quality was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, while depression symptoms were assessed using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. Cross-lagged panel models were utilized to examine autoregressive and cross-lagged associations between sleep problems and depression symptoms across pregnancy.

Results

Findings reveal that both sleep problems and depression symptoms independently predict one another across pregnancy. All associations covaried for baseline sleep problems and depression symptoms. Specifically, more sleep problems in early pregnancy predicted higher depression symptoms mid-pregnancy (β=.14, p = .011), and elevated depression symptoms in early pregnancy predicted more sleep problems mid-pregnancy (β=.18, p = .002). Similarly, more sleep problems in mid-pregnancy predicted more depression symptoms in late pregnancy (β =.10, p = .029), while depression symptoms in mid-pregnancy predicted more sleep problems during late pregnancy (β=.16, p = .004).

Conclusion

Both prenatal maternal sleep and depression independently predict one another across pregnancy. Assessing sleep in early pregnancy may help with the detection of worsening depression, and vice versa, across the perinatal period.
调查孕期产妇睡眠与抑郁之间的动态关系
睡眠问题和抑郁症状在怀孕期间是非常普遍和动态的,对母亲和后代的健康都有影响。然而,很少有研究调查了它们在怀孕期间的双向关系,以确定睡眠是否是后来抑郁症状的独立预测因素,反之亦然。本研究旨在探讨孕期三次产妇睡眠问题与抑郁症状之间的动态关系。方法在妊娠早期招募的孕妇(n = 222)在妊娠17周、28周和35周左右完成睡眠和抑郁问卷。产前母亲的睡眠质量使用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数进行评估,而抑郁症状使用爱丁堡产后抑郁量表进行评估。使用交叉滞后面板模型来检查怀孕期间睡眠问题和抑郁症状之间的自回归和交叉滞后关联。研究结果显示,在怀孕期间,睡眠问题和抑郁症状相互独立预测。基线睡眠问题和抑郁症状的所有关联都是共同变化的。具体来说,怀孕早期睡眠问题越多,怀孕中期抑郁症状就越严重(β=。14, p = .011),妊娠早期抑郁症状升高预示妊娠中期更多的睡眠问题(β=。18日,p = .002)。同样,怀孕中期睡眠问题较多预示着怀孕后期抑郁症状较多(β =。10, p = .029),而怀孕中期的抑郁症状预示着怀孕后期更多的睡眠问题(β=。16日,p = 04)。结论孕期睡眠与抑郁相互独立预测。在怀孕早期评估睡眠可能有助于发现抑郁症的恶化,反之亦然,在整个围产期。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of mood and anxiety disorders
Journal of mood and anxiety disorders Applied Psychology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General), Behavioral Neuroscience
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