Smith Michael T, Perlis Michael L, Haythornthwaite Jennifer A
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, USA.
Clin J Pain. 2004 Mar-Apr;20(2):111-8. doi: 10.1097/00002508-200403000-00008.
Sleep disturbance, depression, and heightened risk of suicide are among the most clinically significant sequelae of chronic pain. While sleep disturbance is associated with suicidality in patients with major depression and is a significant independent predictor of completed suicide in psychiatric patients, it is not known whether sleep disturbance is associated with suicidal behavior in chronic pain. This exploratory study evaluates the importance of insomnia in discriminating suicidal ideation in chronic pain relative to depression severity and other pain-related factors.
Fifty-one outpatients with non-cancer chronic pain were recruited. Subjects completed a pain and sleep survey, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Multidimensional Pain Inventory. Subjects were classified as "suicidal ideators" or "non-ideators" based on their responses to BDI-Item 9 (Suicide). Bivariate analyses and multivariate discriminant function analyses were conducted.
Twenty-four percent reported suicidal ideation (without intent). Suicidal ideators endorsed higher levels of: sleep onset insomnia, pain intensity, medication usage, pain-related interference, affective distress, and depressive symptoms (P < 0.03). These 6 variables were entered into stepwise discriminant function analyses. Two variables predicted group membership: Sleep Onset Insomnia Severity and Pain Intensity, respectively. The discriminant function correctly classified 84.3% of the cases (P < 0.0001).
Chronic pain patients who self-reported severe and frequent initial insomnia with concomitant daytime dysfunction and high pain intensity were more likely to report passive suicidal ideation, independent from the effects of depression severity. Future research aimed at determining whether sleep disturbance is a modifiable risk factor for suicidal ideation in chronic pain is warranted.
睡眠障碍、抑郁以及自杀风险增加是慢性疼痛最具临床意义的后遗症。虽然睡眠障碍与重度抑郁症患者的自杀倾向有关,并且是精神科患者自杀完成的重要独立预测因素,但尚不清楚睡眠障碍是否与慢性疼痛患者的自杀行为有关。这项探索性研究评估了失眠在区分慢性疼痛患者自杀意念方面相对于抑郁严重程度和其他疼痛相关因素的重要性。
招募了51名非癌症慢性疼痛门诊患者。受试者完成了疼痛和睡眠调查、匹兹堡睡眠质量指数、贝克抑郁量表和多维疼痛量表。根据受试者对BDI-第9项(自杀)的回答,将其分为“有自杀意念者”或“无自杀意念者”。进行了双变量分析和多变量判别函数分析。
24%的人报告有自杀意念(无自杀意图)。有自杀意念者在以下方面得分更高:入睡失眠、疼痛强度、药物使用、疼痛相关干扰、情感困扰和抑郁症状(P<0.03)。将这6个变量纳入逐步判别函数分析。两个变量可预测组别:入睡失眠严重程度和疼痛强度。判别函数正确分类了84.3%的病例(P<0.0001)。
自我报告有严重且频繁的初始失眠、伴有日间功能障碍和高疼痛强度的慢性疼痛患者更有可能报告消极自杀意念,这独立于抑郁严重程度的影响。有必要开展进一步研究以确定睡眠障碍是否是慢性疼痛患者自杀意念的一个可改变的风险因素。