Bidirectional relationship between sleep disturbances and pain in Japanese patients with chronic pain: findings from actigraphy and sleep diaries
Hidenori Harada, Ayaka Matsuo, Atsuo Yamashita, Mishiya Matsumoto

TL;DR
The study found that sleep and pain influence each other in chronic pain patients, but objective and subjective sleep measures did not always agree.
Contribution
This study is one of the first to use both objective and subjective measures to explore the bidirectional relationship between sleep and pain in chronic pain patients.
Findings
Lower pain intensity before sleep was associated with higher sleep efficiency measured objectively.
Higher subjective sleep satisfaction was linked to lower pain intensity the next day.
Objective sleep data and subjective sleep ratings showed inconsistent relationships with pain.
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the bidirectional relationship between sleep and pain in Japanese patients with chronic pain through a prospective analysis of the impact of pain on sleep and the impact of sleep on pain the following day, based on both objective and subjective measures. Sleep and pain parameters were recorded every day for a 7-day period in 36 patients with chronic pain. Objective sleep data were collected using an actigraph, and total sleep time, sleep onset latency, total wake time after sleep onset, and sleep efficiency were determined. Subjective ratings of sleep and pain intensity were obtained using sleep diaries and a pain scale. A mixed-effects model was used for data analysis, and the bidirectional relationship between pain and sleep was examined in each direction. Sleep efficiency measured by actigraphy was significantly higher on days when pain before sleep was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Sleep and related disorders · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research
