Center for Child Health, Behavior & Development, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.
Unit for the Study and Treatment of Pain-ALGOS and Research Center for Behavior Assessment (CRAMC), Department of Psychology and Institut d'Investigació Sanitaria Pere Virgili, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Catalonia, Spain.
Disabil Health J. 2019 Oct;12(4):588-593. doi: 10.1016/j.dhjo.2019.04.001. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
Sleep problems are common for individuals living with physical disabilities and chronic pain. However, the factors that influence the relationship between pain and sleep problems in these populations remain unknown.
The aim of this study was to increase our understanding of the physical, emotional and cognitive factors associated with sleep disturbance in individuals with chronic health conditions often associated with physical disabilities.
Participants were recruited from a database of individuals with a variety of chronic health conditions, including multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, back pain, osteoarthritis, and amputations. To participate in the study, they needed to report having a chronic pain problem. Participants completed an online survey using REDCap assessing average pain intensity (Numerical Rating Scale-11), pain extent (number of painful body areas), sleep disturbance (PROMIS Sleep Disturbance), depression (PROMIS Emotional Distress-Depression) and catastrophizing (Coping Strategies Questionnaire). A total of 455 participants (M = 58.9; SD = 11.4), of which 292 (64%) were women, provided complete data. We performed a series of four regression analyses.
After controlling for age and sex, the predictors explained an additional 7-16% of the variance in sleep disturbance. The final model with all of the predictors explained 22%.
Consistent with the study hypothesis, all the variables examined made significant and independent contributions to the variance in sleep disturbance. The findings provide additional evidence that physical, emotional and cognitive factors all play a role in the sleep quality of individuals with chronic health conditions often associated with physical disabilities.
睡眠问题在患有身体残疾和慢性疼痛的人群中很常见。然而,影响这些人群中疼痛与睡眠问题之间关系的因素尚不清楚。
本研究旨在增进我们对与身体残疾相关的慢性健康状况人群中与睡眠障碍相关的身体、情绪和认知因素的理解。
参与者从包括多发性硬化症、脊髓损伤、背痛、骨关节炎和截肢在内的各种慢性健康状况数据库中招募。要参与研究,他们需要报告患有慢性疼痛问题。参与者使用 REDCap 在线完成一项调查,评估平均疼痛强度(数字评分量表-11)、疼痛程度(疼痛身体区域数量)、睡眠障碍(PROMIS 睡眠障碍)、抑郁(PROMIS 情绪困扰-抑郁)和灾难化(应对策略问卷)。共有 455 名参与者(M=58.9;SD=11.4),其中 292 名(64%)为女性,提供了完整的数据。我们进行了一系列四项回归分析。
在控制年龄和性别后,预测因子解释了睡眠障碍变异的 7-16%。包含所有预测因子的最终模型解释了 22%。
与研究假设一致,所有检查的变量都对睡眠障碍的变异做出了重要且独立的贡献。研究结果进一步表明,身体、情绪和认知因素都在与身体残疾相关的慢性健康状况人群的睡眠质量中发挥作用。