evidence of poor sleep quality in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, i.e., crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) has been reported but never systematically reviewed or meta-analysed. we conducted a sys- tematic review and meta-analysis of pairwise comparisons that included 1) IBD patients/controls, 2) crohn's disease/ulcerative colitis, 3) active/inactive IBD on standardised measures of sleep quality. pubmed, medline, PsycINFO, scopus, and CINAHL were searched up to march 2021. forty-two studies met the inclusion criteria. results showed poorer subjective sleep quality in IBD patients than in controls, with moderate effect sizes (g 1⁄4 .49, [95% CI 1⁄4 .32 - .66], p < .001). no differences within IBD subtypes were found (g 1⁄4 .07, [95% CI 1⁄4 .17e.05], p 1⁄4 .208). individuals with an active IBD reported poorer sleep quality than those in remission, with a large effect size (g 1⁄4 .66, [95% CI 1⁄4 .35 - .98], p < .001). results on objectively recorded sleep were mixed, with no clear evidence of objective sleep impairments in individuals with IBD. results support the view of subjective poor sleep quality as a relevant comor- bidity in IBD. as a potential factor affecting immune and inflammatory responses as well as patients' quality of life, sleep quality should be taken into account in the treatment of IBD.

Ballesio, A., Zagaria, A., Baccini, F., Micheli, F., Di Nardo, G., Lombardo, C. (2021). A meta-analysis on sleep quality in inflammatory bowel disease. SLEEP MEDICINE REVIEWS, 60(Jun 17), 1-12 [10.1016/j.smrv.2021.101518].

A meta-analysis on sleep quality in inflammatory bowel disease

Andrea Zagaria;
2021-01-01

Abstract

evidence of poor sleep quality in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, i.e., crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) has been reported but never systematically reviewed or meta-analysed. we conducted a sys- tematic review and meta-analysis of pairwise comparisons that included 1) IBD patients/controls, 2) crohn's disease/ulcerative colitis, 3) active/inactive IBD on standardised measures of sleep quality. pubmed, medline, PsycINFO, scopus, and CINAHL were searched up to march 2021. forty-two studies met the inclusion criteria. results showed poorer subjective sleep quality in IBD patients than in controls, with moderate effect sizes (g 1⁄4 .49, [95% CI 1⁄4 .32 - .66], p < .001). no differences within IBD subtypes were found (g 1⁄4 .07, [95% CI 1⁄4 .17e.05], p 1⁄4 .208). individuals with an active IBD reported poorer sleep quality than those in remission, with a large effect size (g 1⁄4 .66, [95% CI 1⁄4 .35 - .98], p < .001). results on objectively recorded sleep were mixed, with no clear evidence of objective sleep impairments in individuals with IBD. results support the view of subjective poor sleep quality as a relevant comor- bidity in IBD. as a potential factor affecting immune and inflammatory responses as well as patients' quality of life, sleep quality should be taken into account in the treatment of IBD.
2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore PSIC-04/B - Psicologia clinica
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
sleep
inflammatory bowel disease
crohn's disease
ulcerative colitis
Ballesio, A., Zagaria, A., Baccini, F., Micheli, F., Di Nardo, G., Lombardo, C. (2021). A meta-analysis on sleep quality in inflammatory bowel disease. SLEEP MEDICINE REVIEWS, 60(Jun 17), 1-12 [10.1016/j.smrv.2021.101518].
Ballesio, A; Zagaria, A; Baccini, F; Micheli, F; Di Nardo, G; Lombardo, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/390252
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