Department of Epidemiology, West Virginia School of Public Health.
Department of Pharmaceutical Systems and Policy, West Virginia School of Pharmacy.
Pain Med. 2018 Jul 1;19(7):1340-1356. doi: 10.1093/pm/pnx107.
Previous studies have documented memory impairment in several chronic pain syndromes. However, the potential link between memory loss and osteoarthritis (OA), the second most common cause of chronic pain, remains little explored. In this cross-sectional study, we examine the association of perceived memory loss to OA and assess the potential mediating influence of sleep and mood disturbance in a large Appalachian population.
Cross-sectional.
US Ohio Valley.
A total of 21,982 Appalachian adults age 40 years or older drawn from the C8 Health Project (N = 19,004 adults without and 2,478 adults with OA). All participants completed a comprehensive health survey between 2005 and 2006. Medical history, including physician diagnosis of OA, lifestyle factors, short- and long-term memory loss, sleep quality, and mood were assessed via self-report.
After adjustment for demographic, lifestyle, health-related, and other factors, participants with OA were almost three times as likely to report frequent memory loss (adjusted odds ratios [ORs] for short- and long-term memory loss, respectively = 2.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.2-3.3, and 2.6, 95% CI = 2.0-3.3). The magnitude of these associations increased significantly with rising frequency of reported joint pain (adjusted OR for OA with frequent joint pain vs no OA = 3.3, 95% CI = 2.6-4.1, Ptrend < 0.00001). Including measures of mood and sleep impairment attenuated but did not eliminate these associations (ORs for any memory loss = 2.0, 95% CI = 1.6-2.4, and 2.1, 95% CI = 1.7-2.8, adjusted for sleep and mood impairment, respectively; OR = 1.8, 95% CI = 1.4-2.2, adjusted for both factors).
In this large cross-sectional study, OA and related joint pain were strongly associated with perceived memory loss; these associations may be partially mediated by sleep and mood disturbance.
先前的研究记录了几种慢性疼痛综合征中的记忆障碍。然而,记忆丧失与骨关节炎(OA)之间的潜在联系——第二种最常见的慢性疼痛原因,仍然很少被探讨。在这项横断面研究中,我们研究了感知记忆丧失与 OA 的关联,并评估了在一个大型阿巴拉契亚人群中睡眠和情绪障碍的潜在中介影响。
横断面研究。
美国俄亥俄河谷。
共有 21982 名年龄在 40 岁或以上的阿巴拉契亚成年人,来自 C8 健康项目(19004 名成年人没有 OA,2478 名成年人有 OA)。所有参与者在 2005 年至 2006 年期间完成了一项全面的健康调查。通过自我报告评估了病史,包括医生诊断的 OA、生活方式因素、短期和长期记忆丧失、睡眠质量和情绪。
在调整了人口统计学、生活方式、健康相关和其他因素后,患有 OA 的参与者报告频繁记忆丧失的可能性几乎是三倍(分别为短期和长期记忆丧失的调整后的优势比[ORs]为 2.7,95%置信区间[CI]为 2.2-3.3 和 2.6,95%CI=2.0-3.3)。这些关联的幅度随着报告的关节疼痛频率的增加而显著增加(与无 OA 相比,经常出现关节疼痛的 OA 的调整后的 OR 为 3.3,95%CI=2.6-4.1,Ptrend<0.00001)。包括情绪和睡眠障碍的测量值减弱了但并没有消除这些关联(任何记忆丧失的 ORs 分别为 2.0,95%CI=1.6-2.4 和 2.1,95%CI=1.7-2.8,分别调整睡眠和情绪障碍;调整两个因素后,OR 为 1.8,95%CI=1.4-2.2)。
在这项大型横断面研究中,OA 和相关关节疼痛与感知记忆丧失强烈相关;这些关联可能部分通过睡眠和情绪障碍来介导。