Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wojciech Jernajczyk is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wojciech Jernajczyk.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2012

Sleep and antidepressant treatment.

Adam Wichniak; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Wojciech Jernajczyk

The aim of this review was to describe the sleep anomalies in depression, the effects of antidepressants on sleep, the usefulness of antidepressants in the treatment of primary insomnia and insomnia in other psychiatric disorders. Depression is associated with abnormalities in the sleep pattern that include disturbances of sleep continuity, diminished slow-wave sleep (SWS) and altered rapid eye movement (REM) sleep parameters. Although none of the reported changes in sleep are specific to depression, many of them, for example increased REM density and reduced amount of SWS in the first sleep cycle, are used as biological markers for research on depression and in the development of antidepressant drugs. An antidepressant should reverse abnormalities in the sleep pattern. However, many antidepressants can worsen sleep. Because of the activating effects of some drugs, for example imipramine, desipramine, fluoxetine, paroxetine, venlafaxine, reboxetine and bupropion, many patients who take them have to be co-prescribed with sleep-promoting agents to improve sleep. Even in maintenance treatment with activating antidepressants as many as 30-40% of patients may still suffer from insomnia. Antidepressants with sleep-promoting effects include sedative antidepressants, for example doxepin, mirtazapine, trazodone, trimipramine, and agomelatine which promotes sleep not through a sedative action but through resynchronization of the circadian rhythm. Sedative antidepressants are frequently used in the treatment of primary insomnia, although not many double-blind studies have been provided to support such an approach to insomnia treatment. One exception is doxepin, which has been approved for the treatment of insomnia characterized by difficulties in maintaining sleep.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2013

Sleep as a biomarker for depression

Adam Wichniak; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Wojciech Jernajczyk

Abstract Sleep is a complex biological process that involves cyclic changes of brain activity. The smooth transition between wakefulness and sleep and cyclic succession of sleep stages depend on the function of numerous neurotransmitters that reciprocally influence each other. For this reason sleep is a very sensitive biomarker of brain functioning. This article provides an overview of sleep changes in depression, mechanisms involved in sleep regulation and pathophysiology underlying depression, studies on sleep as a biomarker for depression, effects of antidepressants on sleep EEG, and studies in depression with the use of quantitative sleep EEG analysis. Research on sleep in depression has provided several valuable biomarkers that are related to increased risk for depression, show worsening during depressive episode, and are related to treatment outcome and relapse risk during remission phase. Among many sleep parameters, increased REM density and diminished delta sleep ratio deserve special interest. Sleep studies are also an important research tool for antidepressant drug development. However, due to sensitivity of sleep parameters to pharmacological interventions, the patients have to be investigated before the start of pharmacological treatment or after washout from the antidepressant drug, to obtain reliable data on disease-related biological processes from polysomnography.


Journal of Psychopharmacology | 2006

Electroencephalogram slowing, sleepiness and treatment response in patients with schizophrenia during olanzapine treatment

Adam Wichniak; Tomasz Szafranski; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Ezlzbleta Waliniowska; Wojciech Jernajczyk

Electroencephalogram (EEG) slowing is associated with clozapine side effects, e.g., sedation, and may predict treatment response during clozapine treatment. As olanzapine and clozapine share many pharmacological properties, we investigated whether EEG slowing during olanzapine treatment was related to therapy outcome and sleepiness in patients with schizophrenia. Participants were age- and gender-matched schizophrenic patients treated with olanzapine (n 54), receiving no pharmacological treatment (n 54), or cotreated with olanzapine and some other psychotropic drug (n 38). Their EEG recordings were assessed visually by the same rater blind to clinical data. The EEG scores were categorized using standardized forms. Patients with a poor treatment response did not differ significantly from those with a good response to treatment either in EEG patterns or in frequency of sleepiness. Olanzapine treatment was associated with increased rates of slow (70.4% vs. 22.3%) and sharp waves (22.2% vs. 7.4%), as well as of paroxysmal slow wave discharges (14.8% vs. 1.9%), but did not induce spike- or sharp-slow-wave complexes. Cotreatment with another antipsychotic further increased EEG abnormalities, whereas benzodiazepine administration diminished the olanzapine-induced EEG changes. The results show that olanzapine inducing both slow and sharp waves, as well as paroxysmal discharges, has a strong impact on EEG. However, as no spike- or sharp-slow-wave complexes were observed, the risk of epileptic seizure during olanzapine treatment can be regarded as low, as long as olanzapine is not combined with some other antipsychotic.


Current Psychiatry Reports | 2017

Effects of Antidepressants on Sleep

Adam Wichniak; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Małgorzata Walęcka; Wojciech Jernajczyk

Purpose of ReviewThe aim of this review article was to summarize recent publications on effects of antidepressants on sleep and to show that these effects not only depend on the kind of antidepressant drugs but are also related to the dose, the time of drug administration, and the duration of the treatment.Recent FindingsComplaints of disrupted sleep are very common in patients suffering from depression, and they are listed among diagnostic criteria for this disorder. Moreover, midnocturnal insomnia is the most frequent residual symptom of depression. Thus, all antidepressants should normalize sleep. However, at least in short-term treatment, many antidepressants with so-called activating effects (e.g. fluoxetine, venlafaxine) may disrupt sleep, while others with sedative properties (e.g., doxepin, mirtazapine, trazodone) rapidly improve sleep, but may cause problems in long-term treatment due to oversedation.For sleep-promoting action, the best effects can frequently be achieved with a very low dose, administered early enough before bedtime and importantly, always as a part of more complex interventions based on the cognitive-behavioral protocol to treat insomnia (CBT-I).SummaryFor successful treatment of depression, it is necessary to understand the effects of antidepressants on sleep. Each physician should also be aware that some antidepressants may worsen or induce primary sleep disorders like restless legs syndrome, sleep bruxism, REM sleep behavior disorder, nightmares, and sleep apnea, which may result from an antidepressant-induced weight gain.


Pharmacological Reports | 2013

Negative influence of L-dopa on subjectively assessed sleep but not on nocturnal polysomnography in Parkinson's disease

Jakub Antczak; Maria Rakowicz; Marta Banach; Mirosława Derejko; Jakub Sienkiewicz; Urszula Zalewska; Małgorzata Więcławska; Tomasz Jakubczyk; Wojciech Jernajczyk

BACKGROUND Sleep disorders are highly prevalent among patients with Parkinsons disease (PD). Chronic medication with L-dopa may be one of the factors that contributes to poor sleep quality. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of long term use of L-dopa on objective and subjective measures of sleep quality in PD patients. METHODS Twenty-seven PD patients (mean age 62.5 ± 8.6 years, mean disease duration 7.3 ± 5.9 years, 11 females) underwent nocturnal polysomnography. Their sleep was rated subjectively using the Parkinsons disease sleep scale (PDSS), and their disease severity was assessed using the unified Parkinsons disease severity scale (UPDRS) standard questionnaire. Doses of L-dopa and other medications were correlated with parameters of sleep quality. The polysomnographic recordings were compared with those from 24 age- and gender-matched normal controls. RESULTS The patients showed decreased total sleep time (TST) and sleep efficiency (SE), prolonged sleep onset and REM sleep latency and wake after sleep onset (WASO). Parts I-III of the UPDRS scores correlated with TST, SE and WASO but not with PDSS scores. L-dopa dosage and part IV of the UPDRS correlated with PDSS scores but not with polysomnographic parameters. CONCLUSIONS Higher doses of chronically administered L-dopa correlated with lower sleep quality according to the subjective measures but not according to the polysomnographic parameters, which were related to the severity of PD symptoms. The low sleep quality according to the subjective measurements may result from complications of therapy at high doses of L-dopa.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2011

Patients with insomnia and subthreshold depression show marked worsening of insomnia after discontinuation of sleep promoting medication.

Adam Wichniak; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Wojciech Jernajczyk

OBJECTIVE To investigate whether the outcome of treatment with trazodone CR in primary insomnia differs between patients with and without subthreshold depression. METHODS 14 patients (9 females, mean age 57.3 ± 13.3) with primary insomnia and increased Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores (>10) and 15 sex- and age-matched patients with primary insomnia and low BDI scores (≤ 10) were treated with trazodone CR 25-150 mg/d for 3 months and followed for 1 month after discontinuation of the medication. The Athens Insomnia Scale (AIS), Sheehan Disability Scale (SDS), and Clinical Global Impression scale (CGI) were completed at baseline, after each month of treatment and after the first week of run-out phase. Additional assessment tools comprised sleep diaries, the Leeds Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire (LSEQ) and actigraphic recordings. RESULTS Subjective sleep time increased by 61.5 ± 72.3 min in the group with low BDI and 60.0 ± 59.4 min in the group with increased BDI at the end of the treatment phase. The significant improvements were also observed in the AIS, CGI, LSEQ and SDS. During the run-out phase the improvement was sustained in patients with low BDI, while AIS scores, sleep latency and total sleep time deteriorated in patients with increased BDI. CONCLUSIONS Patients with subthreshold depression, even if the depressive symptoms do not fulfill the time criteria for depressive episode, show marked worsening of insomnia after discontinuation of sleep promoting medication.


World Journal of Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Electroencephalographic theta activity and cognition in schizophrenia: Preliminary results

Adam Wichniak; Łukasz Okruszek; Magdalena Linke; Michał Jarkiewicz; Małgorzata Jędrasik-Styła; Agnieszka Ciołkiewicz; Aleksandra Wierzbicka; Wojciech Jernajczyk; Marek Jarema

Abstract Objectives. MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) is a contemporary standard for assessment of cognitive functions in schizophrenia. The aim of the study was to examine the association between electroencephalographic spectral power and a wide range of cognitive functions measured with MCCB. Methods. Thirty-nine patients with schizophrenia (27 male, mean age 28.2 ± 5.2 years) underwent EEG recordings and were assessed with MCCB. The EEG recordings were visually inspected and manually cleaned from artifacts and subjected to spectral analysis with EEGlab. Absolute and relative power as percentage of total spectral power were computed for frequency ranges from 0.5 to 30 Hz. To compare spectral power in patients with various cognitive functioning, patients from best and worst MCCB quartiles were selected. Results. Superior cognitive performance was associated with less power of theta waves. Six MCCB cognitive tests showed significant correlations with absolute theta power and three tests with relative theta power. The correlation coefficients between MCCB composite score and theta power were rp = −0.45 for absolute and rp = −0.36 for relative values. Increased theta power was linked especially to memory deficits. Conclusions. These preliminary results suggest that electroencephalographic resting state theta power is an indicator of cognitive deficit in patients with schizophrenia.


Psychiatria Polska | 2017

Treatment guidelines for Circadian Rhythm Sleep – Wake Disorders of the Polish Sleep Research Society and the Section of Biological Psychiatry of the Polish Psychiatric Association, part I: Physiology, assessment, and therapeutic methods.

Adam Wichniak; Konrad S. Jankowski; Michał Skalski; Krystyna Skwarło-Sońta; Jolanta Zawilska; Marcin Żarowski; Ewa Poradowska; Wojciech Jernajczyk

Majority of the physiological processes in the human organism are rhythmic. The most common are the diurnal changes that repeat roughly every 24 hours, called circadian rhythms. Circadian rhythms disorders have negative influence on human functioning. The aim of this article is to present the current understanding of the circadian rhythms physiological role, with particular emphasis on the circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWD), principles of their diagnosis and chronobiological therapy. The guidelines are based on the review of recommendations from the scientific societies involved in sleep medicine and the clinical experiences of the authors. Researchers participating in the preparation of guidelines were invited by the Polish Sleep Research Society and the Section of Biological Psychiatry of the Polish Psychiatric Association, based on their significant contributions in circadian rhythm research and/or clinical experience in the treatment of such disorders. Finally, the guidelines were adjusted to the questions and comments given by the members of both Societies. CRSWD have a significant negative impact on human health and functioning. Standard methods used to assess CRSWD are sleep diaries and sleep logs, while the actigraphy, when available, should be also used. The most effective methods of CRSWD treatment are melatonin administration and light therapy. Behavioral interventions are also recommended. Afourteen-day period of sleep-wake rhythm assessment in CRSWD enables accurate diagnosis, adequate selection of chronobiological interventions, and planning adequate diurnal timing of their application. This type of assessment is quite easy, low-cost, and provides valuable indications how to adjust the therapeutic approach to the circadian phase of the particular patient.


Psychiatria Polska | 2015

Frequent difficulties in the treatment of restless legs syndrome - case report and literature review

Dominika Narowska; Milena Bożek; Katarzyna Krysiak; Jakub Antczak; Justyna Holka-Pokorska; Wojciech Jernajczyk; Adam Wichniak

Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is one of the most common sleep disorders. The purpose of this paper is a case description of the patient suffering from RLS, concurrent with numerous clinical problems. In our patient, during long-term therapy with a dopamine agonist (ropinirole), the phenomenon of the augmentation, defined as an increase in the severity of the RLS symptoms, was observed. The quality of life of the patient was significantly deteriorated. Due to the augmentation of RLS symptoms the dopaminergic drug was gradually withdrawn, and the gabapentin as a second-line drug for the treatment of RLS was introduced. Because of the large increase of both insomnia and RLS symptoms during the reduction of ropinirole dose, clonazepam was temporarily introduced. In addition, in the neurological assessment of the distal parts of the lower limb sensory disturbances of vibration were found. The neurographic study confirmed axonal neuropathy of the sural nerves, which explained an incomplete response to dopaminergic medications. However, gabapentin treatment in the dose recommended in neuropathies was impossible due to bothersome side effects. Another important issue in the treatment of the patient were depressive symptoms and the fact that the majority of used antidepressants (mirtazapine, mianserin, tricyclic antidepressants) increase the severity of RLS. Among antidepressants recommended for the treatment of depression in patients with RLS (such as bupropion, moclobemide, reboxetine, tianeptine and agomelatine) only agomelatine exhibits promoting sleep properties. Because of the concomitant insomnia, this drug was applied in our patient.


Psychiatria Polska | 2017

Treatment guidelines for Circadian Rhythm Sleep – Wake Disorders of the Polish Sleep Research Society and the Section of Biological Psychiatry of the Polish Psychiatric Association, part II: Diagnosis and treatment

Adam Wichniak; Konrad S. Jankowski; Michał Skalski; Krystyna Skwarło-Sońta; Jolanta Zawilska; Marcin Żarowski; Ewa Poradowska; Wojciech Jernajczyk

AIM Circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders (CRSWD) are a group of disorders, in which the timing of sleep and wakefulness significantly differs from a patients expectations or socially acceptable times. The aimof the article is to present the current principles for the diagnosis and treatment of CRSWD in adults and children. METHOD Guidelines proposed as CRSWD treatment standard are based on the recommendations from the scientific societies involved in the sleep research and medicine. Researchers participating in the guidelines preparation were invited by the Polish Sleep Research Society and the Section of Biological Psychiatry of the Polish Psychiatric Association based on their significant contribution to the circadian rhythm research and/or clinical experience in the treatment of these disorders. Finally, the guidelines were adjusted to the questions and comments given by the members of both Societies. RESULTS Patients with endogenous CRSWD are often misdiagnosed and treated for insomnia or hypersomnia. Therefore, each patient reporting sleep-wake disorders should be interviewed about the quality of sleep and its timing during free days (e.g. weekends, holidays). Avalid CRSWD diagnosis can be also established by using sleep diaries/logs and actigraphy. The treatment of choice for CRSWD is chronotherapy, which involves melatonin application, light therapy, and behavioral interventions. Sleep disorders associated with shift work and time zone changes are a growing health problem. Interventions for these disorders should primarily focus on prevention. CONCLUSIONS The main problem in the treatment of CRSWD is an invalid diagnosis. Hypnotics and/or psychostimulants are often used instead of chronotherapeutic interventions, what can alleviate symptoms but is not an effective treatment.

Collaboration


Dive into the Wojciech Jernajczyk's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jakub Sienkiewicz

Medical University of Warsaw

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Stepien

Polish Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge