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种族主义相关压力通过睡眠障碍和边缘皮质阿片受体功能对疼痛敏感性的依次介导效应的初步证据。

Preliminary Evidence for the Sequentially Mediated Effect of Racism-Related Stress on Pain Sensitivity Through Sleep Disturbance and Corticolimbic Opioid Receptor Function.

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland..

Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

出版信息

J Pain. 2023 Jan;24(1):1-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2022.09.004. Epub 2022 Sep 24.

Abstract

Sleep disturbance predicts worse pain outcomes. Because sleep disturbance inequitably impacts Black adults - with racism as the upstream cause - understanding how racism-related stress impacts pain through sleep might help minimize racialized pain inequities. This preliminary study examined sequential mediation of the effect of racism-related stress on experimental pain through sleep disturbance and corticolimbic μOR function in pain-free non-Hispanic Black (NHB) and White (NHW) adults. Participants completed questionnaires, actigraphy, positron emission tomography, and sensory testing. We reproduced findings showing greater sleep disturbance and pain sensitivity among NHB participants; greater sleep disturbance (r = .35) and lower pain tolerance (r=-.37) were significantly associated with greater racism-related stress. In a sequential mediation model, the total effect of racism-related stress on pain tolerance (β=-.38, P = .005) weakened after adding sleep disturbance and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) μOR binding potential (BP) as mediators (β = -.18, P = .16). The indirect effect was statistically significant [point estimate = -.003, (-.007, -.0003). Findings showed a potential sequentially mediated effect of racism-related stress on pain sensitivity through sleep disturbance and vmPFC μOR BP As policy efforts are enacted to eliminate the upstream cause of systemic racism, these results cautiously suggest that sleep interventions within racism-based trauma informed therapy might help prevent downstream effects on pain. PERSPECTIVE: This preliminary study identified the effect of racism-related stress on pain through sleep disturbance and mu-opioid receptor binding potential in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Findings cautiously support the application of sleep interventions within racism-based trauma-informed therapy to prevent pain inequities as policy changes function to eliminate all levels of racism.

摘要

睡眠障碍可预测更严重的疼痛结果。由于睡眠障碍在黑人群体中存在不平等的影响,而种族主义是其上游原因,因此了解种族主义相关压力如何通过睡眠影响疼痛,可能有助于减少种族化的疼痛不平等。本初步研究考察了种族主义相关压力通过睡眠障碍和皮质边缘 μ 阿片受体功能对无痛非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和白人(NHW)成年人实验性疼痛的影响的序列中介作用。参与者完成了问卷调查、活动监测、正电子发射断层扫描和感觉测试。我们重现了研究结果,表明 NHB 参与者的睡眠障碍和疼痛敏感性更高;睡眠障碍更大(r=0.35)和疼痛耐受力更低(r=-0.37)与更大的种族主义相关压力显著相关。在序列中介模型中,种族主义相关压力对疼痛耐受力的总效应(β=-.38,P=0.005)在加入睡眠障碍和腹内侧前额叶皮质(vmPFC)μ 阿片受体结合潜力(BP)作为中介后减弱(β=-.18,P=0.16)。间接效应具有统计学意义[点估计=-.003,(-.007,-.0003)。研究结果表明,种族主义相关压力通过睡眠障碍和 vmPFC μ 阿片受体 BP 对疼痛敏感性的潜在序列中介效应。随着消除系统性种族主义上游原因的政策努力的实施,这些结果谨慎地表明,基于种族主义的创伤知情治疗中的睡眠干预可能有助于预防下游对疼痛的影响。观点:本初步研究确定了种族主义相关压力通过睡眠障碍和腹内侧前额叶皮质中 μ 阿片受体结合潜力对疼痛的影响。研究结果谨慎地支持在基于种族主义的创伤知情治疗中应用睡眠干预,以防止不平等的疼痛,因为政策变化将消除所有层面的种族主义。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ea5f/10863672/7f2d634feda4/nihms-1852545-f0001.jpg

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