Subjective versus objective evening chronotypes in bipolar disorder

Aug 28, 2017Journal of affective disorders

Differences Between Self-Reported and Measured Evening Activity Patterns in Bipolar Disorder

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Abstract

Participants with bipolar disorder exhibited a later chronotype than healthy controls based on modified thresholds.

  • Bipolar disorder participants and controls differed significantly in Composite Scale of Morningness (CSM) mean scores and evening chronotypes using modified thresholds.
  • Objective chronotype analysis revealed significant differences based on sleep interval midpoint means between the two groups.
  • A correlation existed between subjective and objective chronotype measurements in individuals with bipolar disorder.
  • Twenty-one consecutive sleep intervals were necessary to achieve a ≥ 95% match in evening chronotype classification using a 75% threshold.

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