Sleep disturbance and intrusive memories after presenting to the emergency department following a traumatic motor vehicle accident: an exploratory analysis
Sleep disturbance and intrusive memories after presenting to the emergency department following a traumatic motor vehicle accident: an exploratory analysis
Background: Sleep disturbances are common after traumatic events and have been hypothesized to be a risk factor in the development of psychopathology such as that associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Objective: To assess the association between intrusive memories, a core clinical feature of PTSD, and self-reported sleep disturbance shortly after experiencing or witnessing a motor vehicle accident, and whether a brief behavioural intervention (trauma reminder cue and Tetris gameplay) reduced sleep disturbance post-trauma.
Method: The exploratory analyses included 71 participants (mean age 39.66, standard deviation 16.32; 37 women, 52.1%) enrolled in a previously published proof-of-concept randomized controlled trial. Participants were recruited from the emergency department after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic motor vehicle accident. Intrusive memories were assessed with a daily paper-and-pen diary for one week post-trauma, and sleep disturbances with three questions from the Impact of Event Scale-Revised assessing problems initiating sleep, problems maintaining sleep and dreams about the event at one week and one month post-trauma. Missing data were imputed 15 times.
Results: The total number of intrusive memories during the first week post-trauma suggested weak to moderate pooled intercorrelations with problems initiating and maintaining sleep. An ordinal regression using imputed data suggested that the intervention had no effect on sleep disturbances, while completers only analyses suggested an improvement in problems maintaining sleep at one week.
Conclusions: This exploratory study suggested that experiencing early intrusive memories is related to sleep disturbances. Sleep disturbance might be a particularly important construct to assess in studies involving intrusive memories post-trauma.
Luik, Annemarie I.
afdf47c0-c62b-434b-9b14-bb98ba9746ec
Iyadurai, Lalitha
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Gebhardt, Isabel
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Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Luik, Annemarie I.
afdf47c0-c62b-434b-9b14-bb98ba9746ec
Iyadurai, Lalitha
daf0f3ec-9224-4565-b16d-c93b1ec23293
Gebhardt, Isabel
015d7f1e-7a7b-4d85-92a5-6b44a70e2bcf
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Luik, Annemarie I., Iyadurai, Lalitha, Gebhardt, Isabel and Holmes, Emily A.
(2019)
Sleep disturbance and intrusive memories after presenting to the emergency department following a traumatic motor vehicle accident: an exploratory analysis.
European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 10 (1).
(doi:10.1080/20008198.2018.1556550).
Abstract
Background: Sleep disturbances are common after traumatic events and have been hypothesized to be a risk factor in the development of psychopathology such as that associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Objective: To assess the association between intrusive memories, a core clinical feature of PTSD, and self-reported sleep disturbance shortly after experiencing or witnessing a motor vehicle accident, and whether a brief behavioural intervention (trauma reminder cue and Tetris gameplay) reduced sleep disturbance post-trauma.
Method: The exploratory analyses included 71 participants (mean age 39.66, standard deviation 16.32; 37 women, 52.1%) enrolled in a previously published proof-of-concept randomized controlled trial. Participants were recruited from the emergency department after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic motor vehicle accident. Intrusive memories were assessed with a daily paper-and-pen diary for one week post-trauma, and sleep disturbances with three questions from the Impact of Event Scale-Revised assessing problems initiating sleep, problems maintaining sleep and dreams about the event at one week and one month post-trauma. Missing data were imputed 15 times.
Results: The total number of intrusive memories during the first week post-trauma suggested weak to moderate pooled intercorrelations with problems initiating and maintaining sleep. An ordinal regression using imputed data suggested that the intervention had no effect on sleep disturbances, while completers only analyses suggested an improvement in problems maintaining sleep at one week.
Conclusions: This exploratory study suggested that experiencing early intrusive memories is related to sleep disturbances. Sleep disturbance might be a particularly important construct to assess in studies involving intrusive memories post-trauma.
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Sleep disturbance and intrusive memories after presenting to the emergency department following a traumatic motor vehicle accident an exploratory ana
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 January 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 507807
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507807
ISSN: 2000-8198
PURE UUID: 75ae692a-9b1c-491b-a621-66e89061c920
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 17:53
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:28
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Contributors
Author:
Annemarie I. Luik
Author:
Lalitha Iyadurai
Author:
Isabel Gebhardt
Author:
Emily A. Holmes
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