Department of Psychiatry, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, MO, USA.
Department of Psychology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Sleep Med. 2018 Dec;52:98-102. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2018.08.015. Epub 2018 Sep 5.
Research documenting the impact of opioid use on sleep among individuals with chronic pain has been mixed. This study aimed to determine if pain intensity moderates the association between opioid use and insomnia symptoms among adults with comorbid symptoms of insomnia and chronic widespread pain.
Participants (N = 144; 95% female; mean age = 51.6, SD = 11.4) completed assessments of insomnia symptoms, pain and use of sleep/pain medication. Multiple regression was used to determine if pain intensity moderates the association between opioid use (yes/no) sleep onset latency (SOL), wake after sleep onset (WASO), sleep quality, or time in bed. Analyses controlled for gender, symptoms of sleep apnea, symptoms of depression, use of sleep medication (yes/no), and use of non-opioid pain medication (yes/no).
Stronger pain intensity was associated with longer self-reported WASO and worse sleep quality, independent of opioid use. Conversely, opioid use was associated with longer time in bed, independent of pain intensity. Opioid use and pain intensity interacted in the prediction of SOL, such that opioid use (vs. non-use) was associated with longer SOL in the context of mild but not moderate to severe pain intensity.
Opioid use was associated with more difficulty falling asleep among adults with chronic pain; however, this cross-sectional effect was only significant among those reporting lower pain intensity. Authors speculate that this effect is masked among those with severe pain because the pain-related sleep debt they acquire throughout the night then facilitates sleep onset the next day.
有研究记录了阿片类药物使用对慢性疼痛患者睡眠的影响,但结果不一。本研究旨在确定疼痛强度是否调节了同时患有失眠和慢性广泛性疼痛的成年人中阿片类药物使用与失眠症状之间的关联。
共有 144 名参与者(95%为女性;平均年龄 51.6±11.4 岁)完成了失眠症状、疼痛和睡眠/疼痛药物使用的评估。采用多元回归分析来确定疼痛强度是否调节了阿片类药物使用(是/否)与睡眠潜伏期(SOL)、睡眠后觉醒时间(WASO)、睡眠质量或卧床时间之间的关联。分析控制了性别、睡眠呼吸暂停症状、抑郁症状、睡眠药物使用(是/否)和非阿片类疼痛药物使用(是/否)。
无论是否使用阿片类药物,疼痛强度越强,自我报告的 WASO 时间和睡眠质量越差。相反,阿片类药物使用与卧床时间延长有关,而与疼痛强度无关。阿片类药物使用和疼痛强度在预测 SOL 方面存在交互作用,即阿片类药物使用(与非使用相比)与轻度疼痛强度下的 SOL 延长有关,但与中度至重度疼痛强度下的 SOL 延长无关。
在慢性疼痛患者中,阿片类药物使用与入睡困难有关;然而,这种横断面效应仅在报告疼痛强度较低的患者中显著。作者推测,在疼痛严重的患者中,这种影响被掩盖了,因为他们在夜间积累的与疼痛相关的睡眠债务会促进第二天的入睡。