医学
活动记录
多导睡眠图
慢性疼痛
类阿片
失眠症
睡眠障碍
麻醉
人口
物理疗法
匹兹堡睡眠质量指数
睡眠(系统调用)
内科学
睡眠质量
精神科
呼吸暂停
计算机科学
操作系统
环境卫生
受体
作者
Julia Robertson,Ross J. Purple,Peter Cole,Zenobia Zaiwalla,Katharina Wulff,Kyle T.S. Pattinson
出处
期刊:Anaesthesia
[Wiley]
日期:2016-08-22
卷期号:71 (11): 1296-1307
被引量:61
摘要
Summary Poor sleep is an increasingly recognised problem with chronic pain and further increases the effect on daily function. To identify the relationship between chronic pain, opioid analgesia and sleep quality, this study investigated activity and sleep patterns in patients taking opioid and non‐opioid analgesia for chronic back pain. Thirty‐one participants (10 healthy controls, 21 patients with chronic pain: 6 on non‐opioid medication; 15 on opioid medication) were assessed using actigraphy, polysomnography and questionnaires. Patients with chronic pain subjectively reported significant sleep and wake disturbances as shown by decreased overall sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, p < 0.001), increased symptoms of insomnia (Insomnia Severity Index, p < 0.001) and increased fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale, p = 0.002). They also spent increased time in bed (p = 0.016), took longer to get to sleep (p = 0.005) and had high interindividual variability in other measures of activity but no overall irregular rest‐activity pattern. Patients on high doses of opioids (> 100 mg morphine‐equivalent/day) demonstrated distinctly abnormal brain activity during sleep suggesting that polysomnography is necessary to detect sleep disturbance in this population in the absence of irregular rest‐activity behaviour. Night‐time sleep disturbance is common in individuals suffering from chronic pain and may be further exacerbated by opioid treatment. Considerations must be made regarding the appropriate use of combined actigraphy and miniaturised polysomnography for future population‐based studies.
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