With a prevalence of up to 10% in industrialized countries, chronic insomnia is one of the most common sleep disorders. Despite comparatively unremarkable objective sleep parameters, those affected report a serious loss of well-being. A new study sheds light on the extent to which instability of REM sleep and inadequate nocturnal emotion processing can explain this contradiction and increase the risk of depressive and anxiety disorders.
Autoren
- Tanja Schliebe
Publikation
- InFo NEUROLOGIE & PSYCHIATRIE
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