| 
			
			 Researchers recruited 117 menopausal women with insomnia for the 
			study and randomly assigned them to three groups. One group received 
			cognitive behavior therapy (CBT). Another group received a component 
			of CBT known as sleep restriction therapy. The third group only 
			received education on so-called sleep hygiene, or habits that can 
			make it easier to fall and remain asleep. 
 Overall, 4.3 percent of the women had moderately severe depression. 
			Both forms of insomnia treatment helped ease depression symptoms for 
			these women, but sleep hygiene education did not.
 
 "We can add targeted cognitive behavioral treatment of insomnia to 
			the current arsenal of treatments available to alleviate menopausal 
			associated insomnia and with this treatment we have the added 
			benefit of reductions in depressive symptoms which frequently 
			co-occur with sleep disturbance associated with menopause," said 
			senior study author Christopher Drake of the Henry Ford Health 
			System in Detroit, Michigan.
 
 
			
			 
			"We hope to one day show that targeting insomnia symptoms early when 
			depression is mild or yet to develop can prevent depression from 
			ever developing in the first place," Drake said by email.
 
 Women typically go through menopause between ages 45 and 55. As the 
			ovaries curb production of the hormones estrogen and progesterone, 
			women can experience symptoms ranging from vaginal dryness to mood 
			swings, joint pain and insomnia.
 
 CBT can train people to use techniques that address the mental (or 
			cognitive) factors associated with insomnia, such as the "racing 
			mind," and to overcome the worry and other negative emotions that 
			often accompany inability to sleep. CBT can also help people with 
			poor sleep establish a healthy bedtime routine and improve sleep 
			patterns, previous research has found.
 
 Sleep restriction therapy can be done on its own, or as a component 
			of CBT for insomnia. This intervention is designed to limit how many 
			times people awaken during the night and reduce the total amount of 
			time spent in bed; it doesn't aim to restrict the total amount of 
			time people spend asleep.
 
 Women in the study who received CBT completed six face-to-face 
			therapy sessions with a registered nurse specializing in behavioral 
			sleep medicine. Sleep restriction therapy was briefer, and involved 
			two face-to-face sessions as well as three phone sessions.
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
 
			The control group of patients assigned to sleep hygiene education, 
			meanwhile, got six weekly emails with tips on how to create better 
			nighttime routines and information on the connection between sleep 
			and a variety of health problems and lifestyle habits.
 Right after insomnia treatment, women with depression who received 
			CBT experienced moderate to large reductions in symptoms of the mood 
			disorder, researchers report in Sleep Medicine.
 
 Patients also reported moderate improvements in depression with 
			sleep restriction therapy, but these effects didn't occur until six 
			months after treatment ended, the study also found.
 
 One limitation of the study is that it excluded women diagnosed with 
			major depression, so it's not clear how well these insomnia 
			treatments would work for these women, researchers note. Differences 
			in the duration and form of treatment between the types of insomnia 
			therapies tested may have also impacted the results.
 
 Researchers also didn't look at hot flashes - a common menopause 
			symptom that can keep women from sleeping well - and it's possible 
			addressing this aspect of menopause could impact both mood and 
			sleep, said Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, a researcher at Yale University 
			School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, who wasn't involved in 
			the study.
 
 The study also didn't examine the impact of hormone therapy, which 
			doctors may prescribe to help ease a variety of menopause symptoms, 
			Minkin said by email.
 
 "Hormone therapy usually has a significant impact on sleep," Minkin 
			said.
 
 "It is good to know of the benefits of CBTI for insomnia, which is 
			always potentially a valuable adjunct," Minkin said. "But clinicians 
			should never forget to think about the potential role of hormone 
			therapy."
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2CvBwrz Sleep Medicine, online December 28, 
			2018.
 
			[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. 
			
			
			 |