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Assessment of sleep quality, anxiety, depression, and quality of life in Behçet’s disease

Research Authors
Ahmad M. Shaddad, Aliaë A. R. Mohamed Hussein, Shady Mohamed Safwat, Esraa A. Talaat, Sara Farrag, Nada M. Gamal & Waleed Gamal Elddin Khaleel
Research Date
Research Year
2023
Research Abstract

Abstract

Background

Behçet’s disease (BD) is a multi-organ disease with different systemic manifestations. While rare in the United States and Europe, it is more common in the Middle East and Asia. BD is one of the commonest encountered vasculitis in Egypt. This study aims to evaluate BD patients' sleep patterns, quality of life, and psychological aspects.

Methods

Patients suffering from Behçet’s disease (thirty patients) and 30 matched age and sex-healthy control participants were recruited in our study. The assessment included the entire clinical history and laboratory investigations, including erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP), and Oxygen saturation level. Evaluation of sleep quality and presence of sleep-disordered breathing was done using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Insomnia severity index (ISI), and Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS). Hamilton’s anxiety (HAM-A) and depression rating scales (HAM-D) were used for psychological assessment. The Short Form 36 Quality Of Life Scale (SF-36 QOL) assessed participants' quality of life.

Results

Behçet’s disease patients suffered significantly higher levels of anxiety and depression compared to the control group. The prevalence of insomnia and daytime sleepiness was significantly higher among BD patients. All components of PSQI, including the global score, were significantly higher among the BD group. Physical functioning, role limitation due to physical health, and emotional problems; also, general health indices were significantly lower for the BD group. Patients with active BD showed significantly higher levels of anxiety, depression, insomnia, day time dysfunction and significantly lower all domains of the SF-36 QOL Scale.

Conclusions

BD is associated with low sleep quality and high levels of anxiety and depression.

Disease activity directly impacts anxiety, depression levels, lower sleep quality, and lower quality of life among BD patients.