Efficacy of Preoperative Exercise in Prehabilitation for Preventing Postoperative Sleep Disturbances and Pain: An Experimental Rat Model Study
Hirofumi Nakamoto, Moe Fujimoto, Megumi Nagata, Sekiyama Hiroshi, Shigehito Sawamura

TL;DR
This study shows that preoperative exercise in rats can reduce postoperative sleep problems and pain, suggesting prehabilitation could improve recovery for surgery patients.
Contribution
The study introduces preoperative exercise as a novel nonpharmacological prehabilitation strategy to mitigate postoperative sleep and pain issues.
Findings
Rats with preoperative exercise had reduced wake time and increased NREM sleep compared to those without exercise.
Preoperative exercise improved pain thresholds, as shown by thermal allodynia test results.
Exercise mitigated postoperative sleep disturbances to levels comparable to sham-operated controls.
Abstract
Background Postoperative sleep disturbances and pain are common, negatively impacting recovery and quality of life. While various preventive strategies exist, the role of preoperative exercise in mitigating these effects remains underexplored. Objective This study evaluates the efficacy of preoperative exercise as a prehabilitation strategy to reduce postoperative sleep disturbances and pain in a rat model. Methods Male Wistar rats were divided into three groups: postoperative pain (PO) without preoperative exercise (N-group), PO with preoperative exercise (P-group), and a sham-operated control (S-group). Sleep patterns, including sleep duration and quality, were analyzed using EEG over a 72-hour period, starting at 8:00 a.m. on the first day of the experiment. Additionally, pain thresholds were assessed using the von Frey and Hargreaves tests. Results Compared to the N-group,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and Wakefulness Research · Sleep and related disorders · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments
