Wilt Joshua A, Davin Sara, Scheman Judith
Case Western Reserve University, ClevelandUnited States.
Neurological Center for Pain, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, ClevelandUnited States.
Scand J Pain. 2016 Jan;10:122-129. doi: 10.1016/j.sjpain.2015.04.028. Epub 2015 May 26.
Pain catastrophizing is linked to heightened pain and poorer coping among individuals with chronic pain, yet little is known about how pain catastrophizing associates with sleep and pain over the course of treatment for chronic pain. Previous research employing a cross-sectional design suggests that sleep mediates the association between pain catstrophizing and pain, but there have been no longitudinal studies examining the directionality of these associations. Thus, the aim of this study was to test two competing theoretical models. The first model specified that pain catastrophizing leads to increased pain via poor sleep. The second model specified that poor sleep leads to increased pain catastrophizing via increased pain.
This study examined the relations between pain catastrophizing, sleep, and pain among 50 consecutive patients (36 female, 14 male) ages 20-80 (M=45.96, SD=13.94) with chronic, non-malignant pain who were admitted to the Cleveland Clinic, Chronic Pain Rehabilitation Programme (CPRP). The CPRP, within the Neurological Centre for Restoration, Neurologic Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, is a comprehensive, interdisciplinary programme designed to treat patients with disabling chronic pain. As part of their daily, morning update with their case manager, patients completed self-report ratings of their previous night's sleep time (TST), and their current pain, anxiety, and depression. Pain catastrophizing was assessed at admission and discharge.
Over the course of treatment, daily TST increased from approximately 5h and 20min per night to nearly 6h and 30min per night, and average daily pain, daily depression, and daily anxiety decreased over the course of treatment. As the data in this study has a multilevel structure, with daily reports nested with in patients, we conducted multilevel path models to examine the longitudinal relations between pain catastrophizing, sleep, and pain. Multilevel path analysis permits the analysis of interdependent data without violating the assumptions of standard multiple regression. Models were conducted for pain catastrophizing and each of its subscales: rumination, magnification and helplessness. The findings were uniform across the composite pain catastrophizing scale and its subscales. There was an indirect path from sleep to pain catastrophizing (post-treatment) via pain, but not from pain catastrophizing (pre-treatment) to pain via sleep. There were also direct effects of sleep on pain and from pain to pain catastrophizing (post-treatment). Additionally, decreases in pain over the course of treatment were related to lower pain catastrophizing post-treatment.
These results call into question previous evidence that pain catastrophizing indirectly affects pain by way of its impact on sleep. Rather, our findings suggest that pain mediates the relationship between sleep and levels of pain catastrophizing. These results therefore underscore importance and value in collecting longitudinal data and potential influence on the conclusions gained with regards to sleep, pain and psychological variables. These findings may be of clinical importance when tailoring interventions for individuals with chronic pain and perhaps even more so for those with comorbid pain and sleep disturbance; prioritizing the treatment of sleep difficulties could result in improvements to pain-related outcomes.
疼痛灾难化与慢性疼痛患者的疼痛加剧及应对能力较差有关,但对于在慢性疼痛治疗过程中疼痛灾难化如何与睡眠及疼痛相关联,人们了解甚少。以往采用横断面设计的研究表明,睡眠介导了疼痛灾难化与疼痛之间的关联,但尚无纵向研究考察这些关联的方向性。因此,本研究的目的是检验两种相互竞争的理论模型。第一个模型表明,疼痛灾难化通过睡眠质量差导致疼痛加剧。第二个模型表明,睡眠质量差通过疼痛加剧导致疼痛灾难化增加。
本研究考察了50例连续入住克利夫兰诊所慢性疼痛康复项目(CPRP)的年龄在20 - 80岁(M = 45.96,SD = 13.94)的慢性非恶性疼痛患者(36名女性,14名男性)的疼痛灾难化、睡眠和疼痛之间的关系。CPRP位于克利夫兰诊所神经学研究所的神经恢复中心内,是一个旨在治疗致残性慢性疼痛患者的综合性跨学科项目。作为患者每天早晨与病例管理员沟通的一部分,患者完成对前一晚睡眠时间(TST)以及当前疼痛、焦虑和抑郁的自我报告评分。在入院时和出院时评估疼痛灾难化情况。
在治疗过程中,每日TST从每晚约5小时20分钟增加到近6小时30分钟,并且每日平均疼痛、每日抑郁和每日焦虑在治疗过程中有所下降。由于本研究中的数据具有多层次结构,每日报告嵌套在患者之中,我们进行了多层次路径模型分析以考察疼痛灾难化、睡眠和疼痛之间的纵向关系。多层次路径分析允许对相互依存的数据进行分析而不违反标准多元回归的假设。针对疼痛灾难化及其每个子量表(沉思、放大和无助)构建了模型。在综合疼痛灾难化量表及其子量表上的研究结果是一致的。存在一条从睡眠通过疼痛到疼痛灾难化(治疗后)的间接路径,但不存在从疼痛灾难化(治疗前)通过睡眠到疼痛的路径。睡眠对疼痛以及疼痛对疼痛灾难化(治疗后)也有直接影响。此外,治疗过程中疼痛的减轻与治疗后较低的疼痛灾难化有关。
这些结果对先前关于疼痛灾难化通过影响睡眠间接影响疼痛的证据提出了质疑。相反,我们的研究结果表明,疼痛介导了睡眠与疼痛灾难化水平之间的关系。因此,这些结果强调了收集纵向数据的重要性和价值,以及对关于睡眠、疼痛和心理变量所得出结论的潜在影响。当为慢性疼痛患者量身定制干预措施时,这些发现可能具有临床重要性,对于那些同时存在疼痛和睡眠障碍的患者可能更是如此;优先治疗睡眠困难可能会改善与疼痛相关的结果。