Phenotypic Variability in Slow‐Wave Sleep in Depression: Associations With Clinical Profiles and Disorder Severity

Apr 8, 2026Journal of sleep research

Differences in Deep Sleep Among People with Depression Linked to Symptoms and Severity

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Abstract

Ninety-seven adults with major depressive episode showed distinct profiles in slow-wave sleep, with shorter latency associated with poorer sleep quality and greater anxiety.

  • Shorter slow-wave sleep latency correlated with increased anxiety and depressive severity.
  • Increased slow-wave sleep proportion was linked to earlier hospitalisation and higher daytime sleepiness.
  • Reduced slow-wave sleep proportion was associated with more frequent hospitalisations and depressive episodes.
  • Increased slow-wave sleep duration correlated with higher anxiety and depressive symptom severity.
  • A five-factor model effectively distinguished increased slow-wave sleep proportion from normal levels, explaining 30.8% of variance.

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