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Dive into the research topics where Rick Wassing is active.

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Featured researches published by Rick Wassing.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Genome-wide association analysis of insomnia complaints identifies risk genes and genetic overlap with psychiatric and metabolic traits

Anke R. Hammerschlag; Sven Stringer; Christiaan de Leeuw; Suzanne Sniekers; Erdogan Taskesen; Kyoko Watanabe; Tessa F. Blanken; Kim Dekker; Bart H.W. te Lindert; Rick Wassing; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Hreinn Stefansson; Thorarinn Gislason; Klaus Berger; Barbara Schormair; Juergen Wellmann; Juliane Winkelmann; Kari Stefansson; Konrad Oexle; Eus J. W. Van Someren; Danielle Posthuma

Persistent insomnia is among the most frequent complaints in general practice. To identify genetic factors for insomnia complaints, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and a genome-wide gene-based association study (GWGAS) in 113,006 individuals. We identify three loci and seven genes associated with insomnia complaints, with the associations for one locus and five genes supported by joint analysis with an independent sample (n = 7,565). Our top association (MEIS1, P < 5 × 10−8) has previously been implicated in restless legs syndrome (RLS). Additional analyses favor the hypothesis that MEIS1 exhibits pleiotropy for insomnia and RLS and show that the observed association with insomnia complaints cannot be explained only by the presence of an RLS subgroup within the cases. Sex-specific analyses suggest that there are different genetic architectures between the sexes in addition to shared genetic factors. We show substantial positive genetic correlation of insomnia complaints with internalizing personality traits and metabolic traits and negative correlation with subjective well-being and educational attainment. These findings provide new insight into the genetic architecture of insomnia.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Slow dissolving of emotional distress contributes to hyperarousal

Rick Wassing; Jeroen S. Benjamins; Kim Dekker; Sarah Moens; Kai Spiegelhalder; Bernd Feige; Dieter Riemann; Sophie van der Sluis; Ysbrand D. van der Werf; Lucia M. Talamini; Matthew P. Walker; Frans Schalkwijk; Eus J. W. Van Someren

Significance Decades of research into the cause of chronic insomnia have identified hyperarousal as the key factor, but mechanisms underlying hyperarousal have remained elusive. The present findings suggest that hyperarousal can result from an inadequate resolution of emotional distress, which, in turn, is likely due to restless rapid-eye-movement sleep. The mechanisms underlying hyperarousal, the key symptom of insomnia, have remained elusive, hampering cause-targeted treatment. Recently, restless rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep emerged as a robust signature of sleep in insomnia. Given the role of REM sleep in emotion regulation, we hypothesized that restless REM sleep could interfere with the overnight resolution of emotional distress, thus contributing to accumulation of arousal. Participants (n = 1,199) completed questionnaires on insomnia severity, hyperarousal, self-conscious emotional distress, and thought-like nocturnal mentation that was validated to be a specific proxy for restless REM sleep (selective fragmentation: R = 0.57, P < 0.001; eye movement density: R = 0.46, P < 0.01) in 32 polysomnographically assessed participants. The experience of distress lasting overnight increased with insomnia severity (β = 0.29, P < 10−23), whereas short-lasting distress did not (β = −0.02, P = 0.41). Insomnia severity was associated with hyperarousal (β = 0.47, P < 10−63) and with the thought-like nocturnal mentation that is specifically associated with restless REM sleep (β = 0.31, P < 10−26). Structural equation modeling showed that 62.4% of the association between these key characteristics of insomnia was mediated specifically by reduced overnight resolution of emotional distress. The model outperformed all alternative mediation pathways. The findings suggest that restless REM sleep reflects a process that interferes with the overnight resolution of distress. Its accumulation may promote the development of chronic hyperarousal, giving clinical relevance to the role of REM sleep in emotion regulation in insomnia, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2017

Insomnia heterogeneity: Characteristics to consider for data-driven multivariate subtyping

Jeroen S. Benjamins; Filippo Migliorati; Kim Dekker; Rick Wassing; Sarah Moens; Tessa F. Blanken; Bart H.W. te Lindert; Jeffrey Sjauw Mook; Eus J. W. Van Someren

Meta-analyses and systematic reviews have reported surprisingly few consistent insomnia-characteristics with respect to cognitions, mood, traits, history of life events and family history. One interpretation of this limited consistency is that different subtypes of insomnia exist, each with its own specific multivariate profile of characteristics. Because previously unrecognized subtypes will be differentially represented in individual studies and dilute effect sizes of subtype-dependent characteristics of importance, they are unlikely to be reported consistently in individual studies, letxa0alone in meta-analyses. This review therefore aims to complement meta-analyses by listing previously reported psychometric characteristics of insomnia, irrespective of the degree of consistency over studies. The review clearly indicates that characteristics of insomnia may not be limited to sleep. Reports suggest that at least some individuals with insomnia may deviate from people without sleep complaints with respect to demographics, mental and physical health, childhood trauma, life events, fatigue, sleepiness, hyperarousal, hyperactivity, other sleep disorders, lifetime sleep history, chronotype, depression, anxiety, mood, quality of life, personality, happiness, worry, rumination, self-consciousness, sensitivity, dysfunctional beliefs, self-conscious emotion regulation, coping, nocturnal mentation, wake resting-state mentation, physical activity, food intake, temperature perception and hedonic evaluation. The value of this list of characteristics is that 1) internet has now made it feasible to asses them all in a large sample of people suffering from insomnia, and 2) statistical methods like latent class analysis and community detection can utilize them for a truly bottom-up data-driven search for subtypes. The supplement to this review provides a blueprint of this multivariate approach as implemented in the Sleep registry platform (www.sleepregistry.nl), that allows for bottom-up subtyping and fosters cross-cultural comparison and worldwide collaboration on insomnia subtype finding - and beyond.


Sleep | 2016

Wake High-Density Electroencephalographic Spatiospectral Signatures of Insomnia.

Michele A Colombo; Jennifer R. Ramautar; Yishul Wei; Germán Gómez-Herrero; Diederick Stoffers; Rick Wassing; Jeroen S. Benjamins; Enzo Tagliazucchi; Ysbrand D. van der Werf; Christian Cajochen; Eus J. W. Van Someren

STUDY OBJECTIVESnAlthough daytime complaints are a defining characteristic of insomnia, most EEG studies evaluated sleep only. We used high-density electroencephalography to investigate wake resting state oscillations characteristic of insomnia disorder (ID) at a fine-grained spatiospectral resolution.nnnMETHODSnA case-control assessment during eyes open (EO) and eyes closed (EC) was performed in a laboratory for human physiology. Participants (n = 94, 74 female, 21-70 y) were recruited through www.sleepregistry.nl: 51 with ID, according to DSM-5 and 43 matched controls. Exclusion criteria were any somatic, neurological or psychiatric condition. Group differences in the spectral power topographies across multiple frequencies (1.5 to 40 Hz) were evaluated using permutation-based inference with Threshold-Free Cluster-Enhancement, to correct for multiple comparisons.nnnRESULTSnAs compared to controls, participants with ID showed less power in a narrow upper alpha band (11-12.7 Hz, peak: 11.7 Hz) over bilateral frontal and left temporal regions during EO, and more power in a broad beta frequency range (16.3-40 Hz, peak: 19 Hz) globally during EC. Source estimates suggested global rather than cortically localized group differences.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe widespread high power in a broad beta band reported previously during sleep in insomnia is present as well during eyes closed wakefulness, suggestive of a round-the-clock hyperarousal. Low power in the upper alpha band during eyes open is consistent with low cortical inhibition and attentional filtering. The fine-grained HD-EEG findings suggest that, while more feasible than PSG, wake EEG of short duration with a few well-chosen electrodes and frequency bands, can provide valuable features of insomnia.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2018

Increased hippocampal-prefrontal functional connectivity in insomnia

Jeanne Leerssen; Rick Wassing; Jennifer R. Ramautar; Diederick Stoffers; Oti Lakbila-Kamal; Joy Perrier; Jessica Bruijel; Jessica C. Foster-Dingley; Moji Aghajani; Eus J. W. Van Someren

HighlightsHigh hippocampal functional connectivity with left middle frontal gyrus in insomnia.Insomnia severity increases with strength of hippocampal‐MFG connectivity.Sleep efficiency decreases with strength of hippocampal‐MFG connectivity.No differences in hippocampal volume between people with insomnia and controls. Abstract Insomnia Disorder (ID) is the second‐most common mental disorder and has a far‐reaching impact on daytime functioning. A meta‐analysis indicates that, of all cognitive domains, declarative memory involving the hippocampus is most affected in insomnia. Hippocampal functioning has consistently been shown to be sensitive to experimental sleep deprivation. Insomnia however differs from sleep deprivation in many aspects, and findings on hippocampal structure and function have been equivocal. The present study used both structural and resting‐state functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in a larger sample than previously reported to evaluate hippocampal volume and functional connectivity in ID. Included were 65 ID patients (mean age = 48.3 y ± 14.0, 17 males) and 65 good sleepers (mean age = 44.1 y ± 15.2, 23 males). Insomnia severity was assessed with the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), subjective sleep with the Consensus Sleep Diary (CSD) and objective sleep by two nights of polysomnography (PSG). Seed‐based analysis showed a significantly stronger connectivity of the bilateral hippocampus with the left middle frontal gyrus in ID than in controls (p = .035, cluster based correction for multiple comparisons). Further analyses across all participants moreover showed that individual differences in the strength of this connectivity were associated with insomnia severity (ISI, r = 0.371, p = 9.3e−5) and with subjective sleep quality (CSD sleep efficiency, r = −0.307, p = .009) (all p FDR‐corrected). Hippocampal volume did not differ between ID and controls. The findings indicate more severe insomnia and worse sleep quality in people with a stronger functional connectivity between the bilateral hippocampus and the left middle frontal gyrus, part of a circuit that characteristically activates with maladaptive rumination and deactivates with sleep.


Sleep Medicine | 2016

Erratum to: The sleep registry. An international online survey and cognitive test assessment tool and database for multivariate sleep and insomnia phenotyping [Sleep Medicine 14S (2013) e293–e294]

Jeroen S. Benjamins; Filippo Migliorati; Kim Dekker; Rick Wassing; Sarah Moens; E. Van Someren; I. Hartescu; J. Itzhacki; T. Pinto; N. Tesler; J. Perrier; C. Garbazza; M. Jarkiewicz

The authors would like to inform you that the name of the seventh author was incorrectly listed as “L. Hartescu” in their published article. Dr Hartescus affiliation to Loughborough University was also missed. We apologise for these errors, which have been corrected above.


Sleep Medicine | 2013

The sleep registry. An international online survey and cognitive test assessment tool and database for multivariate sleep and insomnia phenotyping

Jeroen S. Benjamins; Filippo Migliorati; Kim Dekker; Rick Wassing; Sarah Moens; E. Van Someren; L. Hartescu; J. Itzhacki; T. Pinto; N. Tesler; J. Perrier; C. Garbazza; M. Jarkiewicz


Personality and Individual Differences | 2019

A clinical interpretation of shame regulation in maladaptive perfectionism

Frans Schalkwijk; Eus J. W. Van Someren; Rick Wassing


Sleep Medicine | 2017

Data-driven topic analysis of high density EEG reveals concomitant superficial sleep during deep sleep in insomnia

J.A.E. Christensen; Rick Wassing; Yishul Wei; Jennifer R. Ramautar; O. Kamal; P. Jennum; E.J.W. van Someren


Sleep | 2017

0423 TYPE-SPECIFIC EFFECTS OF CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT ON ADULT SLEEP PROBLEMS

C Paquola; Rick Wassing; J Lagopoulos; E.J.W. van Someren

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Kim Dekker

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

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Sarah Moens

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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Filippo Migliorati

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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Jennifer R. Ramautar

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

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Bart H.W. te Lindert

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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C. Garbazza

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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Diederick Stoffers

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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E. Van Someren

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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