Sleep Variability and Negative Alcohol-Related Consequences in College Students: Dynamic Associations With ADHD.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Nicholas P Marsh, Lauren E Oddo, Kelsey K Wiggs, James G Murphy, Andrea Chronis-Tuscano
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: College students often engage in heavy alcohol use and experience poor sleep. These risks are exacerbated among students with ADHD, who are especially vulnerable to both poor sleep and alcohol-related negative consequences. Although prior research has often focused on average sleep patterns, the impact of variability in sleep (i.e., bedtime, duration, and waketime) remains understudied. This variability may be particularly important for individuals with ADHD, given the self-regulation challenges that underline both sleep and alcohol use. Therefore, we examined ADHD-related differences in sleep variability and tested whether sleep variability predicts alcohol-related negative consequences.

Methods: Utilizing 2-week daily diaries in a sample engaging in heavy drinking (N = 101; ADHD = 51, without ADHD = 50), Dynamic Structural Equation Models (DSEM) were applied to examine ADHD group differences in sleep variability and sleep averages (bedtime, waketime, and duration) and alcohol-related negative consequences, and test if sleep variability predicted negative consequences.

Results: ADHD group status was significantly associated with later average waketimes, but not in average bedtimes or average sleep duration. However, students with ADHD did report significantly greater variability in their bedtimes, waketimes and sleep duration, as well as greater alcohol-related negative consequences, compared to controls. Notably, ADHD was not a significant covariate in any adjusted models; instead, greater sleep duration variability significantly predicted increased negative consequences independent of ADHD status.

Conclusion: These findings highlight the importance of considering sleep variability for those with ADHD and more generally as a risk mechanism associated with alcohol-related negative consequences in college students who report heavy drinking.

大学生睡眠变异性和酒精相关的负面后果:与多动症的动态关联。
背景:大学生经常酗酒,睡眠质量差。这些风险在患有多动症的学生中加剧,他们特别容易受到睡眠不足和酒精相关负面后果的影响。虽然先前的研究通常集中在平均睡眠模式上,但睡眠可变性(即就寝时间、持续时间和清醒时间)的影响仍未得到充分研究。考虑到睡眠和饮酒对自我调节的挑战,这种可变性对多动症患者来说可能尤为重要。因此,我们研究了与adhd相关的睡眠变异性差异,并测试了睡眠变异性是否能预测与酒精相关的负面后果。方法:利用大量饮酒的样本(N = 101; ADHD = 51,非ADHD = 50) 2周的每日日记,应用动态结构方程模型(DSEM)检验ADHD组在睡眠变异性和睡眠平均(就寝时间、醒着时间和持续时间)以及酒精相关负面后果方面的差异,并检验睡眠变异性是否预测负面后果。结果:ADHD组状态与较晚的平均起床时间显著相关,但与平均就寝时间或平均睡眠时间无关。然而,与对照组相比,患有多动症的学生在就寝时间、起床时间和睡眠时间方面确实存在更大的差异,而且与酒精相关的负面影响也更大。值得注意的是,ADHD在任何调整后的模型中都不是显著的协变量;相反,更大的睡眠时间变化显著地预示着与多动症状态无关的负面后果的增加。结论:这些发现强调了将睡眠变异性考虑到ADHD患者的重要性,更广泛地说,这是一种与酗酒相关的大学生负面后果相关的风险机制。
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
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
71
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Attention Disorders (JAD) focuses on basic and applied science concerning attention and related functions in children, adolescents, and adults. JAD publishes articles on diagnosis, comorbidity, neuropsychological functioning, psychopharmacology, and psychosocial issues. The journal also addresses practice, policy, and theory, as well as review articles, commentaries, in-depth analyses, empirical research articles, and case presentations or program evaluations.
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