重度饮酒失眠症退伍军人的睡眠和疼痛之间的双向联系。

Eunjin Lee Tracy, Christine J So, Sydney D Shoemaker, Jill A Kanaley, Timothy Trull, Camila Manrique-Acevedo, Christina S McCrae, Brian Borsari, Mary Beth Miller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究目标:退伍军人经常遭受慢性疼痛和睡眠问题的困扰,频率高于一般人群,导致一些人用酒精自我治疗。虽然研究表明睡眠和疼痛之间存在联系,但很少有研究在日常水平上检查睡眠和疼痛之间的双向联系,或者饮酒可以在多大程度上缓解这些联系。方法:寻求失眠治疗的重度饮酒退伍军人(N = 109, 82.5%为男性,平均年龄38.9岁)完成了14天的早晨日记,记录睡眠模式、疼痛强度和酒精摄入量。多层次模型研究了人与人之间的睡眠(质量、持续时间和效率)与第二天疼痛以及疼痛与当晚睡眠之间的关系。结果:与睡眠时间较短、睡眠质量较差、睡眠效率较低的人相比,睡眠时间较长、睡眠质量较好、睡眠效率较高的人报告的疼痛水平较低(p值p = 0.01)。与假设相反,每日疼痛水平并不能预测每日个人水平的睡眠结果,尽管注意到显著的人与人之间的相关性。每日饮酒对这些关系没有影响。结论:重度饮酒的失眠症退伍军人的睡眠质量与日常疼痛体验有关。无论饮酒与否,每天睡眠质量的变化都会显著影响疼痛,突出了从睡眠到疼痛的主要单向影响。这些发现强调了优化睡眠以减轻这一人群疼痛的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bidirectional links between sleep and pain among heavy-drinking veterans with insomnia.

Study objectives: Military veterans often suffer from chronic pain and sleep issues at a greater frequency than the general population, leading some to self-medicate with alcohol. While research shows a connection between sleep and pain, few studies have examined bidirectional links between sleep and pain at the daily level-or the extent to which alcohol use may moderate these associations.

Methods: Heavy-drinking veterans seeking treatment for insomnia (N = 109, 82.5% male, mean age 38.9 years) completed 14 days of morning diaries documenting sleep patterns, pain intensity, and alcohol consumption. Multilevel modeling examined within- and between-person associations between sleep (quality, duration, and efficiency) and next-day pain as well as pain and same-night sleep.

Results: Individuals with longer sleep duration, better sleep quality, and higher sleep efficiency (SE) reported lower pain levels compared to those with shorter sleep, poorer sleep quality, and lower SE (p values <.001 to .01). In addition, on days when individuals experienced better sleep quality compared to their own average, they reported lower pain levels the following day (p = .01). In contrast to hypotheses, daily pain levels did not predict sleep outcomes at the daily within-person level, although significant between-person correlations were noted. Daily alcohol intake did not affect these relationships.

Conclusions: Sleep quality is associated with the daily experience of pain among heavy-drinking veterans with insomnia. Daily variations in sleep quality significantly impact pain, irrespective of alcohol consumption, highlighting a predominantly unidirectional influence from sleep to pain. These findings underscore the importance of optimizing sleep to mitigate pain in this population.

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