Department of Neurology, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York.
Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Clin Sleep Med. 2023 Feb 1;19(2):309-317. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.10320.
Using the Sleep Regularity, Satisfaction, Alertness, Timing, Satisfaction, and Duration (Ru-SATED) sleep health framework, we examined the association between multidimensional sleep health and headache burden in a cohort of 98 adults with episodic migraine.
Participants wore wrist actigraphs and completed twice-daily electronic diaries regarding sleep, headaches, and other health habits for 6 weeks. We calculated separate composite sleep health scores from diary and actigraphy assessed measures using the Ru-SATED framework. We used adjusted multivariable linear regression models to examine the association between composite sleep health scores and headache frequency, duration, and pain intensity.
Among 98 participants (mean age: 35 ± 12 years; 87.8% female), 83 had healthy ranges in ≥ 3 sleep dimensions. In models adjusted for age, sex, menopausal status, physical activity and alcohol intake, good sleep health was associated with fewer headache days/month (actigraphy: 3.1 fewer days; 95% confidence interval: 0.9, 5.7; diary: 4.0 fewer days; 95% confidence interval: 1.1, 6.9). Results did not change substantively with further adjustment for stress and depressive symptoms. We did not observe an association between sleep health and headache duration or intensity, respectively.
Among patients with episodic migraine, good multidimensional sleep health, but not the majority of singular dimensions of sleep, is associated with approximately 3-4 fewer headache days/month. In addition, there was no association with headache duration or intensity. These findings highlight the importance of assessing multiple dimensions of sleep and suggest that improving sleep health may be a potential clinical strategy to reduce headache frequency.
Yoo A, Vgontzas A, Chung J, et al. The association between multidimensional sleep health and migraine burden among patients with episodic migraine. . 2023;19(2):309-317.
使用睡眠规律性、满意度、警觉性、时间安排、满意度和持续时间(Ru-SATED)睡眠健康框架,我们在一个由 98 名发作性偏头痛患者组成的队列中研究了多维睡眠健康与头痛负担之间的关系。
参与者佩戴腕部活动记录仪,并在 6 周内每天两次完成关于睡眠、头痛和其他健康习惯的电子日记。我们使用 Ru-SATED 框架从日记和活动记录仪评估的测量值计算单独的综合睡眠健康评分。我们使用调整后的多变量线性回归模型来研究综合睡眠健康评分与头痛频率、持续时间和疼痛强度之间的关联。
在 98 名参与者(平均年龄:35±12 岁;87.8%为女性)中,83 人的睡眠维度中有 3 个维度处于健康范围。在调整年龄、性别、绝经状态、体力活动和饮酒摄入的模型中,良好的睡眠健康与每月头痛天数减少相关(活动记录仪:少 3.1 天;95%置信区间:0.9,5.7;日记:少 4.0 天;95%置信区间:1.1,6.9)。进一步调整压力和抑郁症状后,结果并没有实质性变化。我们没有观察到睡眠健康与头痛持续时间或强度之间的关联。
在发作性偏头痛患者中,良好的多维睡眠健康,但不是睡眠的大多数单一维度,与每月大约减少 3-4 次头痛天数相关。此外,与头痛持续时间或强度无关。这些发现强调了评估睡眠多个维度的重要性,并表明改善睡眠健康可能是减少头痛频率的潜在临床策略。
Yoo A, Vgontzas A, Chung J, et al. The association between multidimensional sleep health and migraine burden among patients with episodic migraine.. 2023;19(2):309-317.