Study objectives: Evaluation of sleep in subjects with night eating syndrome (NES).
Design: Polysomnographic and questionnaire comparisons between subjects with NES and controls.
Setting and participants: Fifteen women with NES (mean +/- SD = 41 +/- 8 years) and 14 women (comparable age and weight) without NES (39 +/- 10 years) were studied in the laboratory for 3 days.
Interventions: N/A.
Measurements and results: Subjects with NES did not differ from controls in timing of sleep onset or offset. They had less stage 2 sleep than controls (minutes, p = .012; percentage, p = .016) and less stage 3 sleep (p = .023), which contributed to their having a lower total sleep time (p = .05) and reduced sleep efficiency (p = .03). Subjects with NES did not have more awakenings than controls, but 93.3% of them ate on awakening during all 3 nights, while 92.9% of controls did not eat on any night. Logistic discriminant analyses identified a multiple sleep parameter model associated with increased likelihood of NES that had sensitivity of 84.6% and specificity of 76.9%. Patients with NES were more depressed than controls (p < .001) and reported greater sleep disturbance that included lower sleep quality (p < or = .001), reduced sleep duration (p < or = .001), and increased number of awakenings (p < or = .001).
Conclusions: Patients with NES appear to have sleep maintenance insomnia rather than sleep-related eating disorder or a parasomnia. The maintenance of normal timing for sleep-wake behavior in the presence of a phase delay in the timing of caloric intake suggests this disorder reflects a state of internal circadian desynchrony associated with significant sleep complaints. It remains unknown whether the sleep disturbance precedes the abnormally timed eating.