Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4186729 Journal of Affective Disorders 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundA web-based survey was developed to explore the effect of pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for sleep difficulties associated with Early-Onset Bipolar Spectrum Disorders (EBSD).MethodFour hundred ninety four parents of 4–12 year-olds, identified by parents as being diagnosed with EBSD, provided information about which professionals were consulted regarding their child's EBSD-sleep problems and pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions that helped or worsened sleep.ResultsMost parents reported consulting at least one medical, mental health, and/or school professional regarding their child's sleep problems. Psychiatrists and other physicians were most often consulted. The majority of parents reported several medications/supplements as helpful, most commonly, atypical antipsychotics (54.4%). Over half identified various pharmacological agents that worsened sleep, most commonly, stimulants (35.0%). Most parents also reported several non-pharmacological interventions that aided sleep problems, most frequently, a sleep routine. Over two-thirds reported a variety of non-pharmacological interventions that worsened sleep, most notably, punishment (34.8%).LimitationsThe sample was non-random consisting of self-selected and web-savvy parents who self-identified their children as having EBSD and provided only parent derived data.ConclusionsAlthough exploratory and despite limitations, this is the first survey to report data on both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for EBSD-sleep problems. It highlights clinical interventions that may improve or worsen EBSD-sleep and provides directions for future research.

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