So, in a different study, Perlis surveyed 147 elderly patients and found that those with insomnia and no history of depression are six times more likely to experience depression than people who sleep through the night. Interestingly, women with a particular type of insomnia had the strongest association with future depression.
Understanding the Power of Insomnia
There are three types of insomnia. The people found to be most at risk for depression suffered from "middle insomnia." a condition where one can fall asleep but still wakes frequently during the night. While the reason this type of insomnia is a stronger predictor remains unclear, scientists have some theories as to how insomnia develops into depression.
For one, the loss of control over sleep becomes unsettling to patients, says Perlis, and in an effort to regain control, people tend to try to nap or oversleep to compensate for the lost hours. This throws your entire system off, making it even harder for you to fall asleep the next night. Even when the stresses that are causing the insomnia go away, the inability to sleep lingers.
The remedy, Perlis says, is understanding that insomnia is a serious problem when it lingers. If the sleepless nights last for more than a week, be sure to see a doctor for rapid and aggressive treatment to prevent a lack of sleep from turning into something much more serious.
"[Insomnia] is something that should be targeted for treatment directly," says Perlis.