Derivation of research diagnostic criteria for insomnia: report of an American Academy of Sleep Medicine Work Group.

@article{Edinger2004DerivationOR,
  title={Derivation of research diagnostic criteria for insomnia: report of an American Academy of Sleep Medicine Work Group.},
  author={Jack D Edinger and Michael H. Bonnet and Richard R. Bootzin and Karl Doghramji and Cynthia M. Dorsey and Colin A. Espie and Andrew O. Jamieson and William Vaughn McCall and Charles M. Morin and Edward Stepanski},
  journal={Sleep},
  year={2004},
  volume={27 8},
  pages={
          1567-96
        }
}
Insomnia is a highly prevalent, often debilitating, and economically burdensome form of sleep disturbance caused by various situational, medical, emotional, environmental and behavioral factors. Although several consensually-derived nosologies have described numerous insomnia phenotypes, research concerning these phenotypes has been greatly hampered by a lack of widely accepted operational research diagnostic criteria (RDC) for their definition. The lack of RDC has, in turn, led to inconsistent… 

Figures and Tables from this paper

Practice parameters for the psychological and behavioral treatment of insomnia: an update. An american academy of sleep medicine report.
TLDR
These practice parameters provide recommendations regarding behavioral and psychological treatment approaches, which are often effective in primary and secondary insomnia, which replace or modify those published in the 1999 practice parameter paper produced by the American Sleep Disorders Association.
Defining insomnia: the role of quantitative criteria.
TLDR
The investigators did not find a level of severity, frequency, or a combination of the 2 that is differentially superior in terms of both sensitivity and specificity, and as might be expected, as severity criteria increased, sensitivity went down and specificity went up.
Insomnia, comorbidity, and risk of injury among insured Americans: results from the America Insomnia Survey.
TLDR
The associations of insomnia with injuries vary with comorbid conditions in ways that could have important implications for targeting workplace interventions, and specifically, insomnia was significantly associated with workplace and nonworkplace injuries.
Nonrestorative sleep: have we finally found it?
TLDR
Whether NRS is an important component of insomnia is evaluated by defining the population in which NRS occurs, by comparing patterns of daytime symptoms, and by using polysomnography and a variety of subjective measures to gauge sleep quality and other variables of interest in NRS.
Chronic insomnia: clinical and research challenges--an agenda.
TLDR
The important issues concerning insomnia treatment in the future especially in Europe will be reviewed and discussed critically and novel rational treatment avenues require clues on causes and mechanisms from integrated neuroscientific approaches.
Recent developments in the classification, evaluation, and treatment of insomnia.
TLDR
Insomnia is a complex entity, often multifactorial in its etiology; and as research and clinical guidelines are established and validated (leading to better data interpretation), continued enhancement of the authors' understanding of this disorder is expected.
Comparative investigation of the psychophysiologic and idiopathic insomnia disorder phenotypes: psychologic characteristics, patients' perspectives, and implications for clinical management.
TLDR
Many similarities between IdI and PI were observed across psychologic measures, and both groups exhibited a preference for behavioral treatment, which appears to suggest that an acceptance-based therapy may also be appropriate for some people with IdI.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 196 REFERENCES
Subtyping primary insomnia: is sleep state misperception a distinct clinical entity?
TLDR
Although available data are not conclusive, there appears to be sufficient evidence to suggest subjective and objective insomnia subtypes may suffer from distinctive forms of sleep-related pathophysiology.
Practice parameters for the evaluation of chronic insomnia. An American Academy of Sleep Medicine report. Standards of Practice Committee of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
TLDR
This practice parameter paper presents recommendations for the evaluation of chronic insomnia based on the evidence in the accompanying review paper and recommends use of these parameters by the sleep community, but hopes the large number of primary care physicians providing this care can benefit from their use.
Evaluation of chronic insomnia. An American Academy of Sleep Medicine review.
TLDR
An adequate evaluation of persistent insomnia requires detailed historical information as well as medical, psychological and psychiatric assessment, and use of a classification system for sleep disorders and familiarity with major diagnostic groups will facilitate the clinician's evaluation and treatment.
Subtyping DSM-III-R primary insomnia: a literature review by the DSM-IV Work Group on Sleep Disorders.
TLDR
There is not yet sufficient empirical evidence to warrant the abandonment of DSM-III-R "primary insomnia" and the adoption of the ICSD subtypes in DSM-IV, however, the authors affirm the heuristic value of theICSS subtypes and the need for field trials to compare the performance characteristics of the DSM- III-R and I CSD systems.
Prevalence of DSM-IV diagnostic criteria of insomnia: distinguishing insomnia related to mental disorders from sleep disorders.
  • M. Ohayon
  • Psychology
    Journal of psychiatric research
  • 1997
Assessment and treatment of insomnia (including a case control study of patients with Primary Insomnia).
TLDR
There are significant differences in both descriptive and objective EEG data between those with Primary Insomnia and controls and it is recommended that hypnotic treatments should be used for no more than one month.
Epidemiology of insomnia: what we know and what we still need to learn.
  • M. Ohayon
  • Psychology, Medicine
    Sleep medicine reviews
  • 2002
TLDR
The association between insomnia and major depressive episodes has been constantly reported: individuals with insomnia are more likely to have a major depressive illness and longitudinal studies have shown that the persistence of insomnia is associated with the appearance of a new depressive episode.
DSM–IV and ICSD–90 insomnia symptoms and sleep dissatisfaction
TLDR
Although insomnia symptoms are common in the general population, sleep disturbances among sleep-dissatisfied individuals are more severe and sleep dissatisfaction seems a better indicator of sleep pathology than insomnia symptoms.
Prevalence of insomnia in a survey of 12 778 adults in France
TLDR
If DSM‐IV criteria are used, the diagnosis of ‘insomnia’ is lower than in other epidemiological studies, and the criteria have an advantage in that they emphasize the daytime consequences of nocturnal sleep disturbances, which seem to be responsible for the most important socio‐economic costs of the problem.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...