A Retrospective Pilot Study of Imagery Rehearsal Therapy Enhanced with Narrative Therapy Principles for the Treatment of Nightmares in US Military Veterans.

IF 1 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep Science Pub Date : 2023-11-22 eCollection Date: 2023-12-01 DOI:10.1055/s-0043-1776796
Ann Marie Wagner, Anne Richards, Christine Chiros, Paul Thuras, Elizabeth C Parsons, Angela D Oien, Carlos H Schenck, Muna Irfan
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Abstract

Introduction  Chronic nightmares are a common and disabling feature of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for which broadly effective treatments are still lacking. While imagery rehearsal therapy (IRT) demonstrates benefits for patients with idiopathic nightmares and some patients with PTSD-related nightmares, research indicates it may be less beneficial for veterans. Narrative therapy (NT) is a form of psychotherapy which is client-centered and value-focused and has demonstrated benefits for PTSD patients. The application of NT principles to IRT may provide a valuable therapeutic approach for treatment in veterans. Objective  To perform a retrospective chart review of veteran clients participating in a novel, brief intervention developed by the first author consisting of IRT enhanced with NT principles (N-IRT) for the treatment of nightmares. The primary outcomes were nightmare frequency and intensity, and the secondary outcome was the impact of the intervention on nightmare distress and coping, subjective sleep quality, and overall PTSD symptoms. Materials and Methods  We conducted retrospective chart reviews for eight veterans referred to the first author for the treatment of nightmares, who completed N-IRT, including baseline and end-of-treatment measures. The protocol involved a single 60-minute NT-enhanced rescripting session and assigned homework to rehearse the revised dream script, and a follow-up evaluation 4 weeks later. The subjects completed a sleep and nightmare interview developed by the first author and the PTSD Checklist at baseline and after the intervention at the follow-up evaluation. Paired t -tests were conducted to test for pre-to-post differences. Results  In the statistical analysis, we observed a statistically significant and clinically meaningful reduction in the frequency ( p  = 0.04) and intensity of nightmares ( p  = 0.001) from pretreatment to the 1-month follow-up. Measures of nightmare-associated emotional distress, the ability to cope with nightmares, sleep duration and sleep efficiency, as well as overall PTSD symptoms also demonstrated significant improvements. Conclusion  These pilot data provide compelling preliminary evidence that a single-session IRT intervention modified with NT (N-IRT) is effective in reducing nightmare frequency and intensity, reducing nightmare distress, improving the act of coping with nightmares, and improving sleep quality and overall PTSD symptoms in veterans. Further investigation of this method with gold-standard clinical trial designs and larger sample sizes is indicated to confirm effectiveness and to better understand the possible mechanisms of treatment effect.

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用叙事疗法原理加强想象排练疗法治疗美国退伍军人噩梦的回顾性试点研究。
导言:慢性恶梦是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的一种常见致残特征,目前仍缺乏广泛有效的治疗方法。虽然意象排演疗法(IRT)对特发性噩梦患者和一些与创伤后应激障碍相关的噩梦患者有一定疗效,但研究表明该疗法对退伍军人的疗效可能较差。叙事疗法(NT)是一种以客户为中心、以价值为重点的心理疗法,已证明对创伤后应激障碍患者有益。将叙事疗法的原则应用于 IRT 可能会为退伍军人的治疗提供一种有价值的治疗方法。目标 对参与第一作者开发的新型简短干预的退伍军人客户进行回顾性病历审查,该干预由采用 NT 原则的 IRT(N-IRT)强化而成,用于治疗噩梦。主要结果是噩梦的频率和强度,次要结果是干预对噩梦困扰和应对、主观睡眠质量以及整体创伤后应激障碍症状的影响。材料与方法 我们对第一作者转诊的八名完成了 N-IRT 治疗的退伍军人进行了回顾性病历审查,包括基线和治疗结束时的测量。治疗方案包括一次60分钟的NT增强型梦境脚本重写疗程和指定的家庭作业以排练修改后的梦境脚本,以及4周后的随访评估。受试者在基线期和干预后的随访评估中分别完成了由第一作者开发的睡眠和噩梦访谈以及创伤后应激障碍核对表。我们进行了配对 t 检验,以检验前后的差异。结果 在统计分析中,我们观察到从治疗前到 1 个月的随访期间,噩梦的频率(p = 0.04)和强度(p = 0.001)均有显著的减少,且具有临床意义。与噩梦相关的情绪困扰、应对噩梦的能力、睡眠时间和睡眠效率以及创伤后应激障碍的总体症状也有了明显改善。结论 这些试验数据提供了令人信服的初步证据,证明用NT(N-IRT)改良的单次IRT干预能有效降低退伍军人的噩梦频率和强度、减少噩梦困扰、改善应对噩梦的行为、改善睡眠质量和整体创伤后应激障碍症状。为了证实该方法的有效性,并更好地了解治疗效果的可能机制,需要采用黄金标准临床试验设计和更大的样本量对该方法进行进一步研究。
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来源期刊
Sleep Science
Sleep Science CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
124
审稿时长
10 weeks
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