“…SD observed in PTSD are associated with sleep-related arousal regulation (Mellman, 1997 ) and include insomnia, nightmares, hyperarousal states, sleep terrors and nocturnal anxiety attacks, body-movement and breathing-related sleep disorders (Harvey, Jones, & Schmidt, 2003 ; Maher, Rego, & Asnis, 2006 ; Mellman & Hipolito, 2006 ; Pillar, Malhotra, & Lavie, 2000 ; Spoormaker & Montgomery, 2008 ; Westermeyer et al, 2010 ), with heightened sympathovagal tone during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, fragmented REM sleep patterns, reduced REM theta activity (Cowdin, Kobayashi, & Mellman, 2014 ; Germain, 2013 ; Germain et al, 2008 ; Kobayashi, Boarts, & Delahanty, 2007 ; Lamarche & De Koninck, 2007 ; Mellman et al, 2002 ; Mellman & Hipolito, 2006 ) and altered EEG spectral topology (de Boer et al, 2019 ). Interestingly, SD (e.g., disrupted REM sleep, self-reported insomnia and general sleep quality problems) immediately after (Koren, Arnon, Lavie, & Klein, 2002 ; Luik, Iyadurai, Gebhardt, & Holmes, 2019 ; Mellman et al, 2002 , Mellman & Hipolito, 2006 ), as well as prior to trauma exposure could both increase the risk of PTSD development (Acheson et al, 2019 , Bryant, Creamer, O’Donnell, Silove, & McFarlane, 2010 , Koffel, Polusny, Arbisi, & Erbes, 2013 ). Self-reported SD prior to trauma, in particular, has been associated with a 2.5-fold increased risk of PTSD 3 months later in both general population or deployed military troops (Bryant et al, 2010 ; Koffel et al, 2013 ).…”