E2 ModerateModerate confidencePEM not requiredCross-SectionalPeer-reviewedMachine draft
Standard · 3 min
Prevalence and correlates of nonrestorative sleep complaints.
Ohayon, Maurice M · Archives of internal medicine · 2005 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study surveyed over 25,000 people across seven European countries to understand how common nonrestorative sleep (feeling unrefreshed after sleep) is and what factors are linked to it. Researchers found that about 1 in 10 people experience nonrestorative sleep, with women and younger adults affected more often. People with this symptom reported worse daytime tiredness and mental fatigue compared to those with other sleep problems.
Why It Matters
Nonrestorative sleep is a cardinal feature of ME/CFS that has received limited epidemiological study. This large European study establishes NRS as a distinct symptom producing significant daytime impairment (fatigue, irritability, cognitive dysfunction) and validates its association with psychiatric comorbidities—findings directly relevant to understanding ME/CFS symptom burden and disease mechanisms.
Observed Findings
Nonrestorative sleep prevalence was 10.8% in the general European population, ranging from 2.4% (Spain) to 16.1% (United Kingdom).
Nonrestorative sleep was significantly more common in women (12.5%) than men (9.0%), and decreased with increasing age.
Subjects with nonrestorative sleep reported greater daytime impairment (irritability, physical fatigue, mental fatigue) compared to those with difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep alone.
Nonrestorative sleep was positively associated with anxiety disorders, bipolar disorder, depressive disorder, and the presence of physical disease.
Patients with nonrestorative sleep consulted physicians twice as frequently for sleep difficulties as those with other types of insomnia.
Inferred Conclusions
Nonrestorative sleep is a distinct, frequent symptom in the general population that causes greater daytime impairment than traditional insomnia and warrants targeted clinical attention.
Nonrestorative sleep is strongly associated with psychiatric comorbidities (anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder) and may reflect a specific neurobiological phenotype.
The marked geographic variation in NRS prevalence suggests cultural, healthcare system, or environmental factors influence symptom reporting or occurrence across countries.
Remaining Questions
What are the underlying neurobiological mechanisms producing nonrestorative sleep and its associated daytime impairment?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This cross-sectional design cannot establish causation or elucidate mechanistic links between NRS and associated conditions like depression or anxiety. The study does not differentiate NRS occurring in ME/CFS specifically from NRS in other conditions, and geographic variation may reflect cultural, healthcare access, or reporting differences rather than true prevalence differences.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
Does nonrestorative sleep in ME/CFS differ mechanistically from NRS in other conditions or in the general population?
What explains the marked geographic variation in NRS prevalence, and do differences reflect true epidemiological variation or cultural/healthcare reporting differences?
What is the natural history and prognosis of nonrestorative sleep, and what interventions effectively improve sleep restoration and daytime function?