Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) (13 page)

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the Internet (i.e., guided self-hypnosis) to help adults with a fear of the dark. One

reason for the relative absence of scientific accounts may be a stigma attached to

acknowledging a persisting fear typically associated with childhood. Turning off the

lights has been shown to increase arousal and fear, and facilitate an exaggerated

startle response in adults (Grillon, Pellowski, Merikangas, & Davis, 1997), and such

reactivity appears to relate to the common fear of the dark seen in children (Grillon

et al., 1997). It would be interesting to investigate whether turning off the lights is a

mechanism for hyperarousal in insomnia. If a stimulus such as darkness elicits

heightened anxiety, this would be expected to interfere with normal sleep onset.

Somniphobia, the fear of sleep, is one specific phobia sometimes associated with

general sleep difficulty or insomnia. There are several sleep disorders that could

lead to a fear of sleep. The frightening sensorimotor experiences characteristic of

sleep paralysis or hypnagogic hallucinations could cause a fear of sleep to develop.

Although published papers on “fear of sleep” as a phobia are currently lacking, this

References

45

construct is often invoked to explain sleep-avoidant behaviors. PTSD sufferers will

often show a fear of sleep and sleep avoidance in reaction to their chronic disturb-

ing nightmares. Likewise, psychophysiologic insomnia sufferers may also manifest

“fear of sleep” or emotional reactivity to their impending bedtime. Indeed, one

criterion for the diagnosis of psychophysiologic insomnia in the International

Classification of Sleep Disorders, Diagnostic and Coding Manual is heightened

anxiety about sleep (American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2005). Some insomnia

sufferers begin to “dread” sleep because of the repeated negative emotional experi-

ence of not being able to sleep. This conditioning process is seen as a key etiologic

factor for many insomnia sufferers. CBT strategies such as stimulus control and

cognitive therapy (detailed in Chaps. 7 and 8) target conditioned arousal and fears

about sleep and, thus, may be effective in such cases.

Summary

Insomnia as a symptom is a feature of many anxiety disorders. Insomnia can also

be an important comorbid condition in anxiety disorders. There can be subjective

complaints and EEG-verified sleep disturbances across the range of Anxiety

Disorders. Sleep problems may be most prevalent in those with GAD and PTSD.

There is no real impediment to treating the insomnia of those with anxiety disor-

ders, although there may be some special treatment considerations for panic dis-

order (i.e., allowing for a less conservative time-in-bed restriction) and PTSD (i.e.,

addressing nightmares). There is some evidence that treating the comorbid anxiety

disorder only (and thus ignoring the insomnia) may limit the degree of anxiety

disorder treatment response and/or result in residual insomnia. A combined

approach requires more investigation, but preliminary studies have been

promising.

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46

3 Anxiety Disorders and Accompanying Insomnia

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