From the Department of Psychology, DePaul University, Chicago, IL.
the Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2023 Oct 1;77(4):468-473. doi: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000003887. Epub 2023 Sep 20.
A high degree of sleep disturbance is reported among youth with disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBIs). Given that sleep quality impacts a range of pediatric health outcomes including somatic sensations (eg, pain) and depressive mood occurs relatively frequently among youth with DGBIs, there is a dire need to disentangle the unique contributions of sleep and depressive mood on the somatic sensations experienced by youth with DGBIs. We aimed to examine whether depressive mood mediates the relations among sleep disturbance and pain intensity, nausea, and fatigue among youth with DGBIs.
One hundred eighteen patients aged 8-17 years ( Mage = 14.05, SD = 2.88; 70.34% female), 83.05% White/non-Hispanic recruited at a pediatric neurogastroenterology clinic completed measures of sleep disturbance, nausea, fatigue, pain intensity, and depressive mood. Three mediation models examined the effect of sleep disturbance on nausea, fatigue, and pain, with depressive mood as a mediator.
Participants reported moderate sleep disturbance. Depressive mood partially mediated the significant, respective relations between greater sleep disturbance and more severe nausea and fatigue. Sleep disturbance was significantly associated with higher pain intensity; however, depressive mood was not a significant mediator of this relation.
Sleep quality is a major concern among youth with DGBIs. Low sleep quality may worsen nausea and fatigue via co-occurring increases in depressive mood symptoms. In contrast, sleep disturbance may directly increase pain, regardless of youths' depressive mood symptoms. Future research should explore these relations through prospective studies leveraging a combination of subjective and objective assessment approaches.
有报道称,患有胃肠道-大脑互动障碍(DGBI)的青少年睡眠障碍程度较高。鉴于睡眠质量会影响一系列儿科健康结果,包括躯体感觉(例如疼痛),并且患有 DGBI 的青少年中抑郁情绪相对频繁发生,因此迫切需要厘清睡眠和抑郁情绪对患有 DGBI 的青少年躯体感觉的独特影响。我们旨在研究抑郁情绪是否在 DGBI 青少年的睡眠障碍与疼痛强度、恶心和疲劳之间的关系中起中介作用。
118 名年龄在 8-17 岁的患者(Mage = 14.05,SD = 2.88;70.34%为女性),83.05%为白种人/非西班牙裔,在儿科神经胃肠病学诊所完成了睡眠障碍、恶心、疲劳、疼痛强度和抑郁情绪的测量。三个中介模型考察了睡眠障碍对恶心、疲劳和疼痛的影响,以抑郁情绪为中介。
参与者报告了中度睡眠障碍。抑郁情绪部分中介了睡眠障碍与恶心和疲劳严重程度之间的显著关系。睡眠障碍与更高的疼痛强度显著相关;然而,抑郁情绪并不是这种关系的显著中介。
睡眠质量是 DGBI 青少年的主要关注点。睡眠质量低可能会通过共病的抑郁情绪症状加重恶心和疲劳。相比之下,无论青少年的抑郁情绪症状如何,睡眠障碍都可能直接增加疼痛。未来的研究应通过利用主观和客观评估方法相结合的前瞻性研究来探索这些关系。