Nightmares and insomnia are the only sleep symptoms included in current diagnostic criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (
1); however, patients with PTSD report a variety of sleep complaints beyond these core symptoms (
2). Other disruptive sleep abnormalities include dream enactment behaviors (DEBs), which are movements or vocalizations, such as kicking, thrashing, or yelling, that are presumed to occur in response to dream content during sleep (
2,
3). DEBs were previously described as a manifestation of PTSD-related phenomena (
3–
5). However, the differential diagnosis of DEB is broader. Associated conditions include REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD), non-REM parasomnias, nocturnal epilepsy, and secondary manifestations of sleep disorders, such as severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) or periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD) (
6–
8). From a clinical standpoint, attribution of DEB phenomena solely to the PTSD syndrome in a given patient may lead to missed diagnoses of concurrent sleep disorders that have substantial clinical implications if left untreated or unrecognized.
RBD is one of the most important diagnostic considerations in a patient with DEB. In part, this is because the presence of RBD can herald the onset of neurodegeneration, most commonly synucleinopathies such as Parkinson’s disease (
9). The relevance of whether DEB in a patient with PTSD represents RBD is underscored in OIF/OEF/OND veterans, because mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) (
10,
11) and PTSD itself (
12) are reported to contribute to future neurodegeneration risk. In addition, clinical conditions that may be present in individuals with PTSD may predispose to RBD (e.g., antidepressant use and alcohol withdrawal) (
9) or are associated with future neurodegeneration (i.e., depressive disorders) (
13). As these recently deployed veterans age, there is a critical need to address risk assessment, including early identification of neurodegenerative biomarkers.
Results
Of the first 100 enrolled participants in the Houston TRACTS cohort, 78 were included in the planned analyses (
Figure 1). Twenty-two enrollees were excluded for the following reasons: diagnoses of bipolar disorder (N=1) and primary psychosis (N=1), inability to provide a reliable medical and psychiatric history (N=2), missing data from the clinical interview (N=9), history of moderate or severe TBI (N=7), absence of lifetime emotional trauma exposure (N=1), and withdrawal of consent (N=1).
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the analyzed sample are summarized in
Table 1. Overall, 30.7% (N=24) of participants had OSA. In addition, two participants had OSA comorbid with PLMD or central alveolar hypoventilation, respectively; two had PLMD alone; one had bruxism causing arousals; and one had narcolepsy with cataplexy. These diagnoses were identified from one or more diagnostic laboratory-based sleep studies available for 27 participants (34.6%) or from continuous positive airway pressure titration studies, home studies, or other records available for 11 participants (14.1%).
In the analyzed sample, 24.4% (N=19) endorsed DEBs occurring at least once per week in the past month (DEB+), and 76.6% (N=59) were categorized as having no or infrequent DEBs (DEB−). The DEB+ group had higher CAPS-IV scores (62.63 [SD=28.38] versus 42.05 [SD=23.87], p=0.005), higher PSQI total scores (15.68 [SD=2.89] versus 11.66 [SD=3.71], p<0.001), a higher number of mTBIs with loss of consciousness (LOC) (1.68 [SD=1.20] versus 0.97 [SD=1.05], p=0.015), and a greater likelihood of having a sleep disorder diagnosis (63.2% versus 30.5%, p=0.015) compared with the DEB− group. There was not a statistically significant difference in the time since last deployment between groups (
Table 1).
In the first set of model selection that excluded the PSQI total score, we selected a multivariable model (model 1) that included the CAPS-IV total score (odds ratio=1.028, 95% CI=1.006−1.051, p=0.013) and the number of mTBIs with LOC (p=0.065) (
Table 2). However, when the PSQI total score was included in the first step of the model selection, the identified model (model 2) no longer included the CAPS-IV score (
Table 2). The selected model suggested that regularly occurring DEB was positively associated with the number of mTBIs with LOC (odds ratio=1.879, 95% CI=1.100–3.210, p=0.021), as well as the PSQI total score (odds ratio=1.588, 95% CI=1.219–2.068, p<0.001).
Indeed, when incorporating the CAPS-IV total score into the model that adjusted for the PSQI total score and the number of mTBIs with LOC (model 3), the CAPS-IV total score became nonsignificant (p=0.702) with reduced effect size. Considering the criteria for establishing mediation (
21), as well as the positive correlation between the CAPS-IV and PSQI total scores (Spearman’s rho=0.48, p<0.001), the results collectively suggest that the PSQI total score largely explained and mediated the relationship between CAPS-IV scores and DEBs.
Discussion
To gain insights into the potential pathophysiology of the previously reported association of DEBs with PTSD symptom severity (
3–
5), we examined relationships between DEB, PTSD, sleep disorder diagnoses, and mTBI in a sample of previously deployed OEF/OIF/OND veterans. We found regularly occurring and disruptive DEBs to be most strongly associated with the number of mTBIs with LOC, the PSQI total score (i.e., the severity of global sleep impairment), and the CAPS-IV total score (i.e., increased PTSD symptom severity). After adjusting for the PSQI total score, the number of mTBIs with LOC remained a significant predictor of regularly occurring DEBs (DEB+). In contrast, after adjusting for the PSQI total score, the association with PTSD severity became statistically nonsignificant, suggesting that the relationship between PTSD severity and regularly occurring DEB is mediated by the severity of global sleep impairment (i.e., PSQI total score).
Our data indicate that the relationship between PTSD severity and DEB frequency may be explained by the severity of global sleep impairment as opposed to a specific impact of the PTSD syndrome, for example, to the pathophysiology of intrusive symptoms. Global sleep impairment can be related to multiple etiological factors, including the presence of other sleep disorders (e.g., OSA), mTBI, and other measures of psychological distress.
Our finding of an association between DEBs and the number of mTBIs with LOC highlights the need for standardized polysomnographic assessment with additional upper-limb electrodes to investigate whether DEB represents REM sleep alterations in veterans. Classically, REM parasomnias present with recall of abnormal behaviors during sleep (
22). DEBs are considered surrogate markers of altered REM architecture, namely the loss of REM atonia that accompanies RBD; as such, clinical and screening assessments for this REM parasomnia include self-reports or bed-partner reports of DEBs (
23,
24).
While it is unknown whether repeated mTBIs directly injure or initiate a neurodegenerative process affecting the neural structures regulating REM atonia or their connections, several lines of evidence suggest that the association between TBI and DEB requires further examination. For example, in a sample of 54 participants with TBIs of differing severities who underwent polysomnography, seven (13%) of the participants were diagnosed with RBD (
25). In a case-control study comprising 694 patients, TBI with LOC was associated with higher odds of RBD (
11). Furthermore, animal models have demonstrated that blast-induced injury affects brainstem white matter (
26,
27), but it is unknown whether these injuries affect the connections of neural circuits regulating REM sleep.
Although none of the participants in the present study were diagnosed with REM parasomnias, we cannot exclude the presence of these parasomnias in this sample, because these diagnoses were not the focus of clinical assessments identified via medical record reviews. In clinical practice, the common attribution of PTSD as a basis for DEBs among veterans with PTSD may preclude or distract from proactive, reliable, and valid assessments of other sleep disorders in veterans with PTSD, who may, for example, otherwise demonstrate evidence for REM atonia loss, complex or simple movements, vocalizations, or other REM behavioral events (
28) on sleep disorder screening instruments or polysomnogram recordings. Furthermore, in the absence of focused testing for REM parasomnias, polysomnographic evaluations often are biased toward assessments for sleep-disordered breathing, fail to include upper-limb electromyography (EMG), and lack standardized approaches to polysomnographic interpretation of muscle tone during REM sleep. Our finding of an association between DEBs and the number of mTBIs with LOC provides support for incorporation of optimal EMG derivations and scoring methods to further characterize the polysomnographic correlates of DEB in OEF/OIF/OND veterans.
As an alternative explanation, a recently proposed parasomnia, trauma-associated sleep disorder, describes nocturnal disruptive behaviors in the context of trauma exposure, with more severe symptoms occurring in individuals most recently exposed (
29). However, in our study sample, we did not find a statistically significant association between time since deployment and DEBs. Although antidepressants may increase muscle tone during REM sleep and possibly unveil RBD (
30), antidepressant use was not a statistically significant predictor of DEB in our sample, again highlighting the need for more accurate polysomnographic and medication assessments in future studies of these veterans
The purpose of this exploratory analysis was to examine correlates of DEB that would form the basis for future hypothesis-driven analyses in the overall TRACTs cohort and design of prospective studies. As such, we recognize the limitations of this investigation.
Retrospective assessment limits the accuracy of self-reported TBI exposures. We surmise that DEBs are specifically associated with the number of mTBIs with LOC as opposed to other TBI indices (e.g., the number of blast exposures) because the number of TBIs with LOC has been reported to be associated with cognitive and behavioral outcomes among individuals who self-report TBI (
31), as well as due to the challenges of eliciting an accurate history of mTBI on a retrospective basis. For example, distinguishing anxiety or surprise in a combat situation from the experience of an altered mental status is especially difficult. Although the BAT-L was designed to assist in discriminating psychological shock from an alteration of consciousness (
18), the validity of self-report years after the event is not well established.
Migraines have been associated with DEBs (
32); however, standardized headache histories were not available to replicate this association in our study sample. Because a detailed assessment of medication compliance was not performed, the actual rates of antidepressant exposure remain unclear. Our measurement of DEBs relied on a single question from the PSQI-A, and the psychometric properties of this single question are unknown; a validated assessment of DEBs in this population requires systematic investigation of sleep physiology.
Our sample size of the first 100 enrolled individuals was determined arbitrarily for the purposes of conducting a hypothesis-generating exploratory analysis. The total number of participants classified as DEB+ (N=19), while relatively small, comprises nearly a quarter of the participants included for analysis. However, the relatively small sample size allows for detection of medium to large effect sizes only. For example, the detectable standardized mean difference between the two DEB groups was a Cohen’s d of 0.7 with an alpha of 0.05 and 80% power. Therefore, it is possible that we did not identify predictors of DEBs with small to medium effect sizes. Additionally, this convenience sample of mostly male volunteer research subjects receiving VA medical care may not represent the entire OEF/OIF/OND veteran population.
We attempted to identify sleep disorder diagnoses as extensively as possible via thorough chart reviews. We found that the most prevalent sleep disorder diagnosis, among those evaluated for such, was OSA. Although other sleep disorders were not associated with DEB in our multivariate model, the lack of prospective polysomnography and positive airway pressure usage data limits determination of whether sleep-disordered breathing or other sleep-related movement disorders predict regularly occurring DEBs. Because obstructive events occur more frequently in REM sleep, movements associated with microarousals may have been interpreted as dream enactment. Potential relationships between nightmares and DEBs also require further study. The high rates of self-reported DEBs and poor sleep quality among the participants in our study underscore the need for research that clarifies polysomnographic correlates of these behaviors. We hypothesize that a subgroup of patients may harbor abnormal REM sleep mechanisms.
The extent to which DEBs, other sleep disorders, TBI, and emotional distress in OEF/OIF/OND veterans are related to the pathophysiology of RBD has implications for diagnostic and treatment algorithms in veterans presenting with PTSD syndromes.
Accordingly, future studies of OEF/OIF/OND veterans should incorporate measures of sleep- related complaints, clinical sleep histories, neurological examinations, bed-partner reports, polysomnographic findings, and positive airway pressure device adherence data. Prospective video polysomnography using upper-limb EMG should be performed and analyzed in a standardized manner to assess whether the high rates of self-reported DEBs are indeed related to increased muscle tone during REM sleep. Neuroimaging studies would further inform whether veterans with DEB have structural changes in brain stem regions implicated in RBD.
In summary, this exploratory analysis found that the number of mTBIs with LOC and the PSQI total score predicted the presence of regularly occurring DEBs in a sample of previously deployed OEF/OIF/OND veterans after adjusting for PTSD severity. Further characterization of this sample that includes standardized, polysomnographic assessment of muscle tone and behavioral events during REM sleep is a logical next step to determine whether repeated mTBI is associated with an increased risk of RBD in this patient population.