Characteristics of Children and Adolescents with Insomnia and Comorbid Nightmares—A Secondary Analysis of Clinical Samples with an Age Range from 0 to 18 Years
Angelika A. Schlarb, Isabel Brandhorst, Barbara Schwerdtle, Maria Zschoche, Andrea Kübler, Karolin Teichmüller

TL;DR
This study examines children and teens with insomnia and nightmares, finding that those with both conditions show more severe sleep and emotional issues.
Contribution
The study provides age-specific insights into the comorbidity of insomnia and nightmares in children and adolescents.
Findings
The prevalence of comorbid nightmares in children with insomnia was 15–24%.
Children with both insomnia and nightmares showed more sleep onset problems and reduced sleep quality.
I + N adolescents were more likely to be anxious and depressed compared to those with only insomnia.
Abstract
Background: Insomnia disorder in childhood and adolescence has severe implications on overall well-being and development. Age-specific treatments for insomnia disorder with cognitive behavioral interventions (CBT-I) are available and effective. Nightmare disorder also has severe consequences in children and adolescents. However, less is known about children with insomnia (I) and comorbid nightmare disorder (I + N). Methods: In this retrospective study, data from 499 children and adolescents with insomnia disorder were included. The prevalence of a comorbid nightmare disorder (I + N) was calculated within three subsamples (toddlers and preschoolers 0.5–4 years, elementary school children 5–10 years, and adolescents 11–18 years). Differences between children with insomnia (I) and those with additional nightmare disorder (I + N) regarding age, sex, family background, sleep quality (SOL,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Wakefulness Research · Infant Health and Development
