Just curious as to the logorithim that some of you guys use to treat insomnia.
melatonin...upwards of 15-20 mg qhs. If that doesn't work I will start a strong anti-histamenergic or other aid. And then if that doesn't work I move on to stronger stuff.
I always start out with OTC melatonin and increase that upwards of 15-20 mg qhs.
Just curious as to the logorithim that some of you guys use to treat insomnia.
Just curious as to the logorithim that some of you guys use to treat insomnia.
When approaching any problem, I think its always best to first consider natural logarithms
When approaching any problem, I think its always best to first consider natural logarithms
I'm embarrassed it took us so long to make that joke.
Depends on the cause of the insomnia, right? Pain? Anxiety? Depression?
...
For primary insomnia, you can consider....
How many psych patients do you know with primary insomnia?
I was totally snoozing on that one. Didn't even notice the word until you brought it up. I actually wrote algorithm in my reply.
I always submit my insomniacs to a 24 hour sleep lab workup with 8-hour continuous polysomnography. I also expect 100% reimbursement.
Depends on the cause of the insomnia, right? Pain? Anxiety? Depression?
First line is always a proper history and physical (maybe they have obstructive sleep apnea, right?). Likely, the patient has inadequate sleep hygiene/improper sleep habits and needs education and encouragement.
For primary insomnia, you can consider Melatonin 3-6 mg, or Ramelteon 8-16mg (per a couple of articles in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine). I'm not aware of any proven therapeutic benefit to melatonin beyond 6 mg for insomnia, (and beyond 12 mg for REM behavior disorder) - but would welcome opinions founded on the literature.
I tend to shy away from Ambien.
How many psych patients do you know with primary insomnia?
I'm a sleep fellow...not a psychiatry resident. So point taken. If there is a cause of the insomnia (like pain) I find it easier to target that first.
I prefer to do 72 hour.
Im ok with 80% reimbursement.
How many psych patients do you know with primary insomnia?
If the insomnia is truly intermittent (1-2x/month), I think Melatonin sometimes works. If the problem is daily, Melatonin seems to stop working after several days in a row. Ramelteon is beautiful when it works, but that seems to be 10-20% in my pop'n. Still, it's worth a try.
Then antihistamines, trazodone, or switch to a primary med (antipsychotic, mood stabilizer, or antidepressant) that's sedating.
Then Ambien with a clear warning about complex sleep behaviors and the need to warn family/roommates, and likelihood of becoming habit forming. I actually prefer to use Sonata b/c it can be given as late as only 3 hrs remaining in the sleep period. In other words, pt's can try all the non-med remedies and sleep hygiene and then take the Sonata if they still can't get to sleep. That way, they never have to anticipate insomnia - and develop the expectation that they will not sleep without a medication.
Then ...
NO, I won't go to BZD's for sleep in the psych outpatient pop'n.
(Agitated psychotics and manics may get it for a few days - inpt ONLY).
I'll continue those that are chronically prescribed with a clear statement that the pt WILL be tapered.
Even in the psych ER, everyone with a sleep complaint (who doesn't get admitted) gets a sleep hygiene handout.
Thanks. Specifically I was wondering about a logorithim (sp?) for medication use to treat insomnia. I always start out with OTC melatonin and increase that upwards of 15-20 mg qhs. If that doesn't work I will start a strong anti-histamenergic or other aid. And then if that doesn't work I move on to stronger stuff. Just wondering what others do.
Although sleep hygiene should be an element of the tx of insomnia, sleep hygiene alone is rarely effective. CBT for insomnia is effective but few people are trained in this (and many of those physicians trained, like myself, don't have time to do the full version). I will often use elements of CBT-I with my insomnia patients. If there is a psychologist in your area trained in CBT-I, this is a good option for many insomnia patients.
What do you consider the appropriate implementation of sleep hygiene?
I was having this discussion with a pulmonary friend and he had very different ideas than myself and a neurologist who is trained in behavioral sleep.
I/we think that CBT-I ultimately is aimed precisely at sleep hygiene. Sounds like you have a different view on what sleep hygiene is. What did you learn to treat with CBT-I?
What do you consider the appropriate implementation of sleep hygiene?
I was having this discussion with a pulmonary friend and he had very different ideas than myself and a neurologist who is trained in behavioral sleep.
I/we think that CBT-I ultimately is aimed precisely at sleep hygiene. Sounds like you have a different view on what sleep hygiene is. What did you learn to treat with CBT-I?
Sleep hygiene includes things like avoiding etoh near bedtime, avoiding caffeine late in the day. According to the AASM practice parameters, there is insufficient evidence to support sleep hygiene as a single modality for the treatment of insomnia. Sleep hygiene is usually included when treating a patient with CBT-I, along with stimulus control and/or sleep restriction therapy.
When I treat pts with CBT-I, it is predominately sleep restriction with elements of stimulus control and sleep hygiene added.
We do a five week (individual or group) program that includes stimulus control and sleep restriction as the primary modalities used, with a smattering of cognitive-behavioral approaches to dealing with the "racing thoughts" that are common in psychophysiologic insomnia. That usually comes in at session three.
I would recommend the book "Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of Insomnia" by Michael Perlis (I think he's a Pittsburgh) - there are some good algorithms in there for behavioral tx of insomnia as well as some scenarios that help to instruct on how to deal with the common roadblocks patients present in tx.
http://www.amazon.com/Cognitive-Behavioral-Treatment-Insomnia-Session/dp/0387222529
I think you are confusing sleep hygiene education with therapy directed at sleep hygiene. What do you think sleep restriction does? Nowhere does it say that therapy directed at sleep hygiene lacks evidence.
Sleep Hygiene Definition: From Wikipedia 😀
"all behavioural and environmental factors that precede sleep and may interfere with sleep"
Then again, you could think like our pulmonary sleep friend who thinks that CBT-I is CBT-I and sleep hygiene is sleep hygiene.
What I think is that sleep hygiene is just the set of behaviors, driven sometimes by certain thoughts, that impact our sleep. These can be therapized by a therapist who is good at therapy.
http://www.aasmnet.org/Resources/PracticeParameters/Review_Insomnia.pdf
Page 2 (1399) has a table with basic definitions.
ManicSleep, since this is a psychiatry forum, you can use a broader definition of sleep hygiene if you like. If we discuss this on the sleep forum, I will insist on a strict definition![]()
I am looking into getting that certification as well but the fact we even have to do it irritates me (not happy about the cost either). Which was actually what myself and my friends, all ex sleep fellows, were discussing.
The discussion regarding CBT and sleep hygeine is purely theoretical and was just a small portion of the entire conversation. How you conceptualize it doesn't really matter to me (ok it does I wont lie) as long as you do it correctly.
Watto,
I havent looked into beyond discussion with colleagues and i know someone got certified in 2008 who was an MD.
You could be right, you should be right...perhaps Dr. Rack could shed some light on this?
Some people drink pills to treat insomia and some people just relax because they believe that is only stress.
Ok this is prob dumb but I have heard the term "drink pills" used a lot in some areas. Pills are solid, so how do you drink[\I] them!? Unless its referring to the take with water thing. I thought the accepted term was "take pills." just wondering if anyone else is familiar with this?