Read Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) Online
Authors: Jack D. Edinger Colleen E. Carney
While not all will respond dramatically to IRT, this treatment does offer benefit
to many who are able to adhere to it.
Is it Time for a Sleep Specialist Consultation?
A major goal of this text is that of providing practitioners guidance in the use of
psychological/behavioral strategies for the management of insomnia and other
sleep-related complaints common among patients with anxiety disorders. Inasmuch
as the range of strategies discussed herein are all evidence-based, these techniques
collectively should provide the mental health practitioner a sizable armamentarium
of approaches for managing patients presenting with comorbid anxiety and sleep-
related complaints. Nonetheless, the problems discussed represent only a subset of
the myriad forms of sleep disturbances that may present as primary or comorbid
sleep disorders. Many people with such conditions require and benefit from one or
more consultations with a sleep specialist. Hence, it is useful to consider the types
of sleep problems and circumstances that would warrant a sleep specialty referral.
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9 Other Issues in Managing the Sleep of Those with Anxiety
Various people with primary sleep disorders present with symptoms that can be
confused with symptoms of an anxiety or insomnia disorders. For example, some
with sleep-disordered breathing (e.g., sleep apnea) report awakening gasping for
breath. Since it is not uncommon for such people to report feeling anxious and sens-
ing rapid heart rate upon such awakenings, it is easy to misinterpret such symptoms
as indicative of nocturnal panic. Furthermore, many people with sleep apnea or nar-
colepsy may present complaining of poor quality or fragmented nocturnal sleep that
they view as contributory to their daytime sleepiness. In some of the more persuasive
patients of this type, there is a risk of attributing the noted daytime symptoms to
the purported insomnia problem. Other people who suffer from restless legs syndrome
may present primarily with sleep onset complaints resulting from their feeling restless
and fidgety when in bed at night. While it may seem reasonable to assume that the
person is suffering from sleep-related performance anxiety and conditional arousal to
the bed and bedroom, such symptoms may actually have a neurologic basis. Finally,
some people who report that they often awaken screaming with a pronounced sense
of fear may be easily misdiagnosed as having nocturnal panic or a nightmare disorder
when, in fact, they suffer from a condition known as night terrors.
It is important to be able to identify those with such disorders since these indi-
viduals most often require the attention of a certified sleep specialist for proper
management. Those with suspected sleep apnea and narcolepsy as well as many
individuals who suffer from night terrors require specific forms of diagnostic sleep
monitoring that are conducted mainly in a sleep disorders center. Such diagnostic
testing is essential in such cases to correctly diagnose these conditions and gauge
their severities. Moreover, sleep specialists present in such centers are much more
likely to understand the specific treatment needs of these patients than are general
practitioners. Although those with restless legs syndrome usually do not require
specialized diagnostic sleep monitoring, they often are difficult to manage and
benefit from the knowledge of a sleep specialist to arrive at the most proper and
effective management strategy. Because the types of patients mentioned should be
considered for referral to a sleep specialist, it is useful to have a ready reference that
can be used to help identify those with one or more of these conditions. Thus,
Table 9.2, which lists the defining symptoms of each of these disorders, is provided
as a reference guide to aid in the identification of those who should be considered
for a sleep specialty consultation.
Of course, reliance on the information in this table will not result in identifica-
tion of all those who may warrant the diagnostic or treatment services a sleep
specialist can offer. In some instances, people may present with difficult to discern
occult primary sleep disorders. Many such cases may have such occult conditions
as a cause of or in addition to their more obvious insomnia symptoms. They may
present the previously described cognitive and behavioral targets that make them
appropriate candidates for a trial of the evidence-based insomnia therapy strategies
discussed herein. However, when patients show a poor or marginal response to a
trial of the cognitive and behavioral techniques described in this text, they may
merit referral to a sleep specialist for further diagnostic evaluation. This is particu-
larly the case when treatment adherence appears good and significant sleep/wake
References
145
symptoms persist. In fact, current practice parameters of the American Academy of
Sleep Medicine suggest that referral for a diagnostic sleep laboratory study should
be considered for insomnia patients when they fail their first line treatment (Littner
et al., 2003). Many such cases sufferer from underlying subtle, albeit clinically
significant, sleep-disordered breathing, or other medical/neurological sleep-specific
disorders than can only be detected via sleep monitoring. Thus, assuming treatment
adherence is satisfactory, nonresponse to the insomnia therapies described in this
text also may serve as adequate rationale for sleep specialist consultation.
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