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Schizophrenia, Sleep Disorders Closely Linked, Suggesting New Treatment Approach

Posted: 04/ 6/2012 11:10 am Updated: 04/ 6/2012 11:10 am

Schizophrenia Sleep
Increasingly abstract paintings of cats by Louis Wain (1860-1939), who is believed to have suffered from schizophrenia

By: Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer
Published: 04/05/2012 07:32 AM EDT on LiveScience

Sleep problems and schizophrenia may have common roots, raising hopes that the devastating mental disorder could be improved by helping patients overcome insomnia.

In a new study monitoring the sleep and circadian rhythms of people with schizophrenia, researchers found many more sleep problems in the schizophrenia patients versus mentally healthy controls. Combined with other research linking a schizophrenia-related gene with sleep-wake cycles in mice, the findings suggest that sleep and schizophrenia are more closely intertwined than ever realized, study researcher Russell Foster told LiveScience.

"We've been thinking of sleep disruption as one of the genetic, developmental and environmental contributors to the development of these appalling conditions," said Foster, who is a circadian and visual neuroscientist at the University of Oxford. 

Sleep and schizophrenia

Clinicians have long recognized that schizophrenia and disturbed sleep go hand-in-hand — about 80 percent of schizophrenia patients have sleep problems, Foster said. But these problems have usually been dismissed as a medication side effect or as the result of social isolation and unemployment in people with the disorder. [10 Stigmatized Health Disorders]

"That didn't make too much sense to me," Foster said.

Many mental disorders come with a side of sleep problems, including depression and bipolar disorder, Foster and his colleagues realized. And intriguingly, genes linked to circadian rhythm — the neural and biological system that attunes our sleep-wake cycles to dark and light — may play a role in some of these disorders. A gene called SNAP25, for example, is known to be important in the circadian system. SNAP25 abnormalities have also been linked to schizophrenia.

Studying sleep

In order to take a systematic look at the circadian rhythms of people with schizophrenia, Foster and his colleagues recruited 20 people with the disease and instructed them to wear movement-detecting wristwatches for six weeks. The amount of motion detected can be analyzed to determine whether the person is asleep or awake, given the vastly different movement patterns between the two states.

The patients also filled out questionnaires and kept daily diaries of their sleep and activities. All of the patients were taking medication to control their symptoms, and they had all been stable on that medication for at least three months. Finally, the patients gave 48 hours work of urine samples to be tested for melatonin, a hormone that regulates sleep (melatonin makes a person sleepy).

For comparison, the researchers asked another 21 mentally healthy but unemployed adults to wear the same watches and keep the same records as the people with schizophrenia. Unemployed people were chosen because the patients with schizophrenia were all unemployed, and employment can alter sleep patterns by forcing people to get up with an alarm clock.

The insomnia of schizophrenia

A comparison between the two groups revealed that while unemployed people keep fairly regular sleep hours, every person with schizophrenia in the sample had a sleep problem.

"What became very clear is that they are massively and completely disrupted," Foster said.

This disruption did not follow a common pattern. Some people with schizophrenia went to bed late and got up late, with their melatonin release patterns delayed by several hours compared with healthy counterparts. Others would get up later and later every day, their circadian rhythms "drifting" through time. The most severely affected showed no normal 24-hour sleep-wake pattern at all. They'd alternate sleep and activity throughout the day and night. [Are You Getting Enough Sleep? (Infographic)]

The results weren't the result of unemployment, because the unemployed-but-healthy group did not show them. Nor could they be linked to any specific medication or dosage level, Foster said.

These results, published in the April issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry, mesh with another recent study by Foster's team, this one published in January in the journal Current Biology. In that study, the researchers examined the sleep-wake behaviors of mice with a SNAP25 gene mutation mimicking schizophrenia.

"Quite amazingly those mice show a [sleep] pattern which is just like the patients with schizophrenia," Foster said.

In mice, the problem arises in broken communication between the cells in the brain that set the body's "clock" and the neurons that then go on to match the body's physiology to that clock. If the same is true of humans with schizophrenia, Foster said, it's possible that by easing sleep troubles, you could also decrease schizophrenia symptoms. This could be done with light therapy, melatonin treatment or even cognitive-behavioral therapy, a kind of talk therapy that helps patients change behaviors such as when and how they fall asleep.

"We want to look at individuals with full-blown conditions, bipolar, psychosis, schizophrenia, to try to develop therapies which will stabilize sleep-wake," Foster said. "And at the same time look precisely at the impact we're having on their physiology."

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 04/05/2012 07:32 AM EDT on LiveScience Sleep problems and schizophrenia may have common roots, raising hopes that the devastating menta...
By: Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 04/05/2012 07:32 AM EDT on LiveScience Sleep problems and schizophrenia may have common roots, raising hopes that the devastating menta...
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05:05 PM on 04/30/2012
Hi Stephanie
Your post definitely shows the need for more and faster research into schizophrenia. As you know, brain illnesses are taking a significant toll on global health with over 2 billion people suffering from some brain related illness. The costs to treat are enormous. The faster we can find cures and better treatments...the better. We at ABVSciences.com are investigating brain function models and ways to encourage faster experimental replication so we can prove theories and results faster and get to cures sooner. One of the ways we are trying to do this is through launching our neuroaccelerator, which is an online data aggregation tool, data cleaning and processing system to help researchers save time and money. We are looking for help to promote and launch this and have decided the"crowd" is a good place to go given we want to bring the "crowd" to neuroscience. Let us know what you think..thanks www.neuroaccelerator.org
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bikefolder32
My micro bio is an honor student.
10:32 PM on 04/12/2012
Seems like they're linking co-morbidities but not proving causality. It's chicken vs. egg. Does insomnia cause the symptoms, or is the insomnia a symptom of the disease because the brain's too busy listening to its impulses?

It strikes me more as insomnia being an effect of the disease rather than the other way around. I don't know much about schizophrenia, but I do know that it tends to run in families and that most people get diagnosed/start having diagnosable symptoms in their late teens and early twenties. The brain is finishing up it's final "adult" stage where there's still growth that occurs (it's why people push for teens to be limited in driving - reflexes are still not at their peak). If the schizophrenia gene interrupts that final "polishing" stage, at a time when even a normal person is at the peak of their energetic life - of course it can cause insomnia and the insomnia in turn doesn't allow the body to repair itself as it normally would - a vicious cycle.

It will be interesting to see if this leads to real treatment improvement. They won't eliminate symptoms, but maybe if people were getting quality sleep, they might be more receptive to staying in treatment and limit the social damage they might encounter.
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Tolms
What Would Cory Booker Do?
02:22 PM on 04/09/2012
This sorta makes sense in a completely uninformed sort of way...when you think about the nature of dreams and the nature of schizophrenia...very interesting.
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methodman
10:26 PM on 04/08/2012
I think I encountered this problem growing up. I was always trying to get away with sleeping only 6 hours a night when I really needed 8 or 9. What happened was the normal maturation process never kicked in Doctors can't diagnose related issues to this either.
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artist-53
Wordy opinionated poor spelling Liberal
09:10 AM on 04/08/2012
Sleep deprivation causes pychosis.A technique that has been used at various prisons in order to break down detainees The study makes sense.
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rg9rts
Carpe Diem! This aint rehearsal
06:54 AM on 04/08/2012
This theory in one form or another has been kicking around for at least 30 years schizophrenia like cancer comes in a variety of flavors, unlike condoms, one size does not fit all. It's a real stretch to jump to bi-polars which also come in their own assorted flavors. That being said it should be explored but I'm not expecting any breakthroughs.....and the beat goes on...
07:10 PM on 04/08/2012
Research using psychiatrists files concluded that there was a substantial difference in bi-polar and schizophrenia diagnoses between USA and Europe. That is Americans would conclude one thing Europeans another. There also seems to be trends in diagnosing one disorder rather than another.
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rg9rts
Carpe Diem! This aint rehearsal
09:28 PM on 04/08/2012
The same can be said for ADHD with the skew to the US.
10:11 PM on 04/07/2012
Very interesting. Any indication that perhaps tobacco could explain this since most schizophrenics smoke tobacco?
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littlewitch
losing faith in humanity one vote at a time
10:55 AM on 04/08/2012
no they don't. Point not taken.
07:49 PM on 04/09/2012
I used to be the primary care physician for a psychiatric hospital. Most of my schizophrenic patients were tobacco smokers (at least 60%). Either they were self-medicating (tobacco might be helpful?) or else their tobacco was causing or aggravating their diagnosis (more likely?) Tobacco definitely affects sleep and also has effects on the pharmacology of their meds.
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05:41 PM on 04/07/2012
I would be utterly unsurprised if it was determined that children whose parents don't place sleep at the top of the priority list are also far more likely to have ADHD children. Seriously. Even among my friends and neighbors with children, I have noticed this difference. And it's actually pretty dramatic, the difference.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
06:47 PM on 04/07/2012
ADHD was the cause of my sleeplessness...trust me, my parents tried. What worked, more than anything during the day was diet modification (no refined foods and additives), and lots of extra-curricular activities...

Kool Aid made me berzerk though...
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07:29 PM on 04/07/2012
I know Kool Aid (and any of those glow-in-the-dark gummy bears, or other "kids" foods that have a ton of sugar and dye) have very interesting effects on my friends' children... mine, not so much for some reason, maybe because I don't buy much of it.

My youngest son was a born NOT-sleeper. He was colicky for the first 6 months, and the only way I could get him to sleep was to have him live ON me, day and night. He still has night terrors, but at least now he usually gets enough sleep.

I'm sure ADHD in some people is genetic, but in others it's induced. I have a friend whose child is diagnosed with ADHD, but I seriously think it's because she doesn't make her child go to bed until late, like 10 or 10:30PM (and sometimes as late as 11), on a school night, and they've been doing that since she was a pre-schooler. They have guilt over how much they work (lots). So they keep her up late to compensate. Not good.
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04:50 PM on 04/07/2012
Psychiatry is a lucrative field.
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littlewitch
losing faith in humanity one vote at a time
10:57 AM on 04/08/2012
Not necessarily
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Velocity88
It's about progression not regression.
02:10 PM on 04/07/2012
I've battled with insomnia issues since I was 11 and when I was 14 anxiety and mental health issues such as being bi-polar developed. This is extremely interesting and I'd love to see more in depth research.
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Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
07:30 PM on 04/07/2012
To start, ask your doctor to refer you for a sleep study to see if you're sleeping normally...reaching enough rem sleep etc.. it can make all the difference in the world. I hope that you find a solution.
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ActaNonVerbaNow
02:12 AM on 04/07/2012
Makes me wonder how much the mental condition affects the lack of sleep and how much the lack of sleep affects the mental condition. Most anyone becomes unstable mentally with repeated sleep deprivation.
01:47 AM on 04/07/2012
OKAY, I spelled it wrong.

or all Twenty make spelling errors?

or all Twenty are Republicans?

or all Twenty (fill in the blank...)
01:38 AM on 04/07/2012
This is based on a study of TWENTY people?
You have got to be kidding.
and if all twenty only watch 2 hours of TV a day, does that cause Schyzoprenia?
or all twenty prefer sherbert to ice-cream?
or all twenty prefer a sweatshirt to a light jacket?

TWENTY PEOPLE?
09:30 AM on 04/07/2012
There's no claim that this proves anything, but it might be a fruitful area for further work.
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MsMoonpieJD
What fresh Hell is this?
09:30 AM on 04/07/2012
Your response might be different if you had a relative who suffered from schizophrenia. It's not a matter of preferences: it's a matter of hearing, seeing, feeling, sensing, smelling things that are not there. It is a thought disorder.

The fact that the observation was made in a study of small sample size, is simply typical of beginning research. Because it is so promising, other researchers will undoubtedly take it up, use a larger sample and try to replicate the results. It has the potential of being a major breakthrough. And that is a very big deal.
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:37 PM on 04/07/2012
I agree completely. Many a breakthrough began with small populations and the use of t-statistics. This study looks very promising.

Indeed, I would like to see this study replicated over a population diagnosed with chronic depression, for I have long believed that such depression is strongly linked to sleeping disorders.
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Mizz Givens
This is my micro bio.
12:55 AM on 04/07/2012
I think the results are interesting. I'd like to see this replicated with a much larger sample size.
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littlewitch
losing faith in humanity one vote at a time
10:59 AM on 04/08/2012
Got to start somewhere
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11:35 PM on 04/06/2012
Sleep disruptions often cause blood oxygen levels to drop below normal levels and CO2 levels to rise to abnormal levels. This lowers PH which irritates blood vessel walls causing general inflammation and a decrease in rates of waste exchange from individual cells. This may be a real problem, especially for the tiniest capillaries in the brain. Inflammation in the brain could be related to numerous problems that range from migraine triggers to dementia and Alzheimer's. Subsequent changes in brain function might be adversely affecting the endocrine system causing hormonal imbalances which in turn affect sleep cycles in a vicious cycle. If the endocrine system is affected then we have another avenue for research on immune response disorders which are related to numerous diseases including arthritis.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
06:48 PM on 04/07/2012
Inflammation is generally the root cause of all chronic illness...everything starts as inflammation, if I am not mistaken. Fascinating perspective, once again.