Can severe Covid disease lead to sleep disorders? This now appears to be a cohort study by a team led by Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the Clinical Epidemiology Center and chief of research and education service of the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System with US veterans. However, is the result simply transferrable to the mass?
An American study with US veterans 1 shows that sleep disorders are more common among recovered Covid patients than among veterans who did not contract Covid-19 by the end of the study .
The study seems to support the assumption that an infection with Sars-CoV-2 can also affect the psyche in the long term. Many of those recovered would still suffer from mental health problems a year after their diagnosis.
To learn more about the association between sleep disorders and COVID-19 illness, 153,848 (2.46%) of 6,241,875 veterans
. The start of follow-up was set as the date of positive test result in the Covid-19 group; The follow-up ended on November 30, 2021.
As a result, at the end of the observation period, 41% still complained of sleep disorders, some of which was severe. The study therefore seems to support the assumption that an infection can also have a long-term effect on the psyche.
The research team led by Ziyad wants to investigate whether the corona virus can directly affect the brain. There are assumptions that an infection can promote inflammation and thus also psychotic symptoms.
“Inflammation can affect how the brain functions in a number of ways, such as the production of serotonin. This hormone fundamentally affects sleep and also mood.”
Maura Boldrini, Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center3
Boldrini explains the increased susceptibility to mental illness among those who have recovered from Covid-19 with a combination of biological and psychological stressors.
Study leader Ziyad Al-Aly is already talking about chronic diseases.
“The diseases we are talking about are chronic diseases that people can suffer from until the end of their lives”
Ziyad Al-Aly4
Whether a biological or psychological cause is decisive for the sleep disorders has not yet been proven. It is therefore important to include the following circumstances when drawing conclusions about the cause on the basis of this study:
We still know too little about the actual causes of the results shown in this study. To my knowledge, there is currently no scientific evidence that the biochemical structure of the different variants of the corona virus can be causally responsible for sleep disorders, and not the psychological consequences resulting from experiencing the disease, such as PTSD.
I think it is premature to hold Covid 19 as a virus solely responsible for the sleep disorders mentioned in the study, but it is extremely likely as a trigger. However, the latter applies to countless other diseases as well. In the case of the above-mentioned study, the generality of the study group cannot be inferred from the constellation.
Also in 2020 there was already a study at Oxford University8. At that time, the incidence for a psychiatric diagnosis (anxiety disorder, sleep disorder and dementia) after a Covid-19-based illness was 18.1% of which only 5.8% was a primary diagnosis. According to this study, stress, anxiety, but also previous mental illnesses are possible causes.
The strikingly higher rate of sleep disorders in the veterans group compared to the group in the Oxford study seems to me to be more evidence that illness caused by Covid-19 infection reactivates or supports existing sleeping or present psychological patterns and imprints.
Thus, for sleep disorders that occur after Covid-19 illness, as with other diseases, in therapy, in sleep coaching as well as in ChronoCoachings, it is important to clarify to what extent issues such as PTSD, anxiety disorders, depression were already present before the illness caused by the virus templates, even if they seemed to have already been overcome. It is also important to find out whether the psychological experience of the disease, accompanied by the media coverage of the pandemic, can play a role in the sleep disorders.
Michael Wieden beschäftigt sich als Betriebswirt seit 2002 mit der Chronobiologie im Personalmanagement. Schon 2003 hielt er hierzu seinen ersten Vortrag auf einer Veranstaltung der INQA (Initiative der neuen Arbeit).
Zu den Themen „Chronobiologie im Personalmanagenement“ sowie mobilen Arbeitsformen hat er bereits Bücher geschrieben, und dabei den Begriff „Liquid Work®“ geprägt.
Zusammen mit Claudia Garrido Luque gründete er 2014 die aliamos GmbH und berät seit dem Kommunen, Unternehmen und Kliniken zum Betrieblichen Gesundheitsmanagement. Von 2012 bis Ende 2016 war er externer Wirtschaftsförderer für die Stadt Bad Kissingen und Initiator des weltweit einzigartigen Projektes „ChronoCity – Pilotstadt Chronobiologie“. Zu ChronoCity®, Chronobiologie-Themen und mobilen Arbeitsformen trat er wiederholt als Experte in verschiedenen Fernsehformaten (z.B. TerraX, Planet Wissen, W wie Wissen, Xenius etc.) auf. Zudem war er von 2014 bis 2017 Mitglied des Arbeitskreises „Zeitgerechte Stadt“ der ARL – Akademie für Raumforschung und Landesplanung in Hannover.
Aktuell hält er Vorträge zum Thema “Chronobiologie im Personalmanagement” und “Mobile Arbeitsformen”, und berät Unternehmen bei der Umsetzung chronobiologischer Ansätze in Unternehmen und Kliniken.
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