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Article Genetic and environmental influences on insomnia, daytime sleepiness, and obesity in twins. 2006
Watson NF, Goldberg J, Arguelles L, Buchwald D. · Department of Neurlogy, University of Washington Sleep Disorders Center at Harborview, Box 359803, 325 Ninth Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104-2499, USA. · Sleep. · Pubmed #16774154 No free full text.
Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVES: To better understand the relationships of insomnia, sleepiness, and obesity. DESIGN: Classic twin study. SETTING: A community-based twin registry in Washington State. PATIENTS OR PARTICIPANTS: One thousand forty-two monozygotic and 828 dizygotic twin pairs participating in the University of Washington Twin Registry. INTERVENTIONS: N/A. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Twins were, on average, 32 years old; 61% were women, and 19.5% were obese, defined as a body mass index > or = 28. Insomnia and sleepiness were endorsed by 19.3% and 3.7% of twins, respectively. Twin correlations were higher in monozygotic than dizygotic twins for insomnia (0.47 versus 0.15), sleepiness (0.37 versus 0.14), and obesity (0.82 versus 0.46). Heritability estimates were 57% for insomnia (p < .001; 95% confidence interval 47-63), 38% for sleepiness (p < .01; 95% confidence interval 16-46), and 73% for obesity (p < .001; 95% confidence interval 49-87). Multivariate genetic model fitting revealed that common additive genetic effects comprised 12.8% of the phenotypic correlation between insomnia and sleepiness (p < .01) and 10% of the phenotypic correlation between insomnia and obesity (p < .01). The phenotypic correlation between sleepiness and obesity was not due to common additive genetic effects. CONCLUSIONS: Insomnia, sleepiness, and obesity are under strong genetic influence. Common genetic effects were observed between insomnia and both sleepiness and obesity, suggesting shared genetic contributions to these phenomena.
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Article Comparison of subjective and objective measures of insomnia in monozygotic twins discordant for chronic fatigue syndrome. 2003
Watson NF, Kapur V, Arguelles LM, Goldberg J, Schmidt DF, Armitage R, Buchwald D. · Department of Neurology and Sleep Disorders Center, University of Washington, Seattle 98104-2499, USA. · Sleep. · Pubmed #12749553 No free full text.
Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVES: To examine the objective and subjective measures of insomnia in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). DESIGN: Monozygotic co-twin control study. SETTING: Academic medical center. PATIENTS OR PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-two pairs of monozygotic twins where 1 member of the pair had CFS and the other did not. INTERVENTIONS: N/A. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Twenty-two CFS-discordant twin pairs completed a Sleep Disorders Questionnaire, overnight polysomnography, and a postpolysomnography sleep survey. Mean and percent differences in the sleep measures were compared between the CFS and healthy twins using matched-pair methods of analysis. Compared with their healthy co-twins, the CFS twins more frequently endorsed 8 subjective measures of insomnia and poor sleep (all p < or = 0.05). However, the CFS and healthy twins did not differ in objective polysomnographic measures of insomnia, including sleep latency, total sleep time, sleep efficiency, arousal number, arousal index, hypnogram awakenings, rapid eye movement (REM)-sleep latency, and percent stages 1, 2, and 3-4 (delta). Percent stage REM sleep was increased in the CFS twins compared with the healthy twins (27.7% vs. 24.4%, p < or = 0.05). On the postpolysomnography survey, CFS twins reported that they had slept fewer hours (6.2 vs. 6.7; p < or = 0.05), and were less well rested (p < or = 0.001) compared to their co-twins. CONCLUSIONS: CFS patients had worse subjective sleep than their co-twins despite little objective data supporting this discrepancy, suggesting they suffer from an element of sleep-state misperception. The higher percentage of REM sleep in the CFS twins implies that REM sleep may play a role in this illness.
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