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The Sleepless Brain: Neuroimaging Support for a Differential Diagnosis of Insomnia (SOMNET)

U

University Hospital of Bordeaux

Status

Completed

Conditions

Insomnia

Treatments

Other: MRI

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02821234
CHUBX 2016/05

Details and patient eligibility

About

One-tenth of the population suffers from insomnia, increasing their risk on other health problems such as depression. Self-reported sleep quality only was historically leading for insomnia diagnosis, but more recently a state of 24-hour hyperarousal has been associated with insomnia, either physiological (increased heart rate, higher frequency EEG) or predominant cognitive-emotional hyperarousal (worry, rumination, repetitive thoughts). Strong evidence shows that those suffering from insomnia with physiological hyperarousal are at higher risk of short and long term severe health problems such as inflammation and hypertension than the group without physiological hyperarousal. The neurophysiological basis of these insomnia phenotypes has however barely been investigated, although its results can have major consequences for how this limiting condition will be treated.

To support the development of a differential diagnosis of insomnia, structural and functional brain connectivity in insomnia patients with different levels of hyperarousal will be investigated and related to sleep variables. Investigators will compare the insomnia group to a normal sleeping control group. Investigators expect that the emotion processing circuit (amygdala-ventromedial prefrontal cortex) is a) more affected in insomniacs compared to normal sleeping controls and b) the directionality of this effect to depend on the level and type of hyperarousal in insomniacs. Further, investigators expect c) amygdala activity to be positive correlated with physiological hyperarousal level and d) prefrontal activity to be positively correlated with cognitive-emotional hyperarousal level. Investigators expect a higher physiological hyperarousal level to be reflected in affected afferent pathways of the amygdala towards the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and investigators expect higher cognitive-emotional hyperarousal to be related to affected efferent pathways from the ventromedial prefrontal cortex to the amygdala. Investigators expect sleep quality to play a mediating role in both types of hyperarousal and their brain activation patterns in insomnia patients and normal sleeping controls.

These data can lead to the definition of new insomnia phenotypes and to new customized and effective insomnia treatment, focused not only on improving sleep but also on changing dysfunctional hyperarousal levels that currently put insomniacs at risk of numerous severe health problems.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 50 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Insomnia group: patients with insomnia: sleep complaints, of at least 3 nights a week, for at least 3 months, affected daytime functioning.
  • control group: no self-reported sleep problems in the last 2 months.
  • 20-50 years old.
  • Male or female.
  • having given written informed consent to participate in the research project.

Exclusion criteria

  • Night and shift-workers.
  • Psychiatric disorder: clinical mood disorder, anxiety disorder, psychosis, bipolar disorder.
  • For insomnia group: all sleep disorders other than persistent insomnia.
  • For control group: all sleep disorders.
  • Progressive neurological diseases that include restless legs syndrome.
  • Cardiovascular disease other than treated hypertension.
  • Unstable respiratory or endocrinological diseases.
  • Drug addiction, alcohol addiction during the previous 6 months.
  • Having undertaken trans-meridian travel (± 3H) in the previous 1 month.
  • Pregnant or lactating women.
  • Chronic pain.
  • Hypnotic and psychotropic medication taking or stopped less than 5 half-life periods of molecules before screening V0.
  • Patient participating to any other interventional study.
  • For MRI: presence of a ferromagnetic foreign body (in particular certain intracranial clips, certain cardiac valves, intraocular foreign body, or subject having worked with metals), the presence of an implanted pacemaker, subject with cardiac or brain valves of ventricular derivation (risk of maladjustment), claustrophobia.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Insomnia group
Experimental group
Description:
Patients with insomnia: sleep complaints, of at least 3 nights a week, for at least 3 months, affected daytime functioning, objectified low sleep quality (SE \<85%) with 10 days actigraphy occurred in the last 2 months
Treatment:
Other: MRI
Control group
Experimental group
Description:
Volunteer without sleep problems either self-reported or objectified through actigraphy (SE ≥85%)
Treatment:
Other: MRI

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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