Date of Presentation

5-2-2024 12:00 AM

College

Rowan-Virtua School of Osteopathic Medicine

Poster Abstract

Background: Sleep deprivation and pain perception significantly impact one another through altered sleep parameters such as Total Sleep Time (TST) and Sleep Efficiency (SE). Particularly in neuropathic pain, disturbed sleep exacerbates pain by disrupting neurobiological mediators like opioids and serotonin. Our research examined how sleep loss affects pain in chronic conditions versus healthy individuals. This research underpins our analysis of how interventions, possibly nutritional, could improve sleep quality and modulate pain perception, exploring this relationship across diverse populations and conditions.

Methods: Our study reviewed peer-reviewed articles published since 2010 on sleep deprivation and pain perception. We searched PubMed, focusing on terms related to insomnia and musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain, selecting systematic reviews, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and longitudinal studies to examine the relationship across clinical and healthy populations.

Results: Our research reveals a positive correlation between chronic neck and back spinal pain with insomnia severity. There were similar associations in conditions like fibromyalgia.

Conclusion & Discussion: We found that disrupted sleep, especially decreased deep sleep stages like N3 and REM, correlates with increased pain sensitivity. Our research highlights the crucial role of restorative sleep in modulating pain, as sleep deprivation reduces the effectiveness of natural analgesics and exacerbates inflammatory response. Our research also underscores the importance of managing sleep disturbances to optimize pain control, particularly in athletes who experience reduced sleep quality due to training and stress.

Keywords

Sleep Deprivation, Insomnia, Neuropathic Pain, MSK Pain, Fibromyalgia, Neck Pain, Back pain, Pain Perception, REM Sleep

Disciplines

Anesthesia and Analgesia | Diagnosis | Integrative Medicine | Medicine and Health Sciences | Nervous System Diseases | Orthopedics | Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms | Sleep Medicine

Document Type

Poster

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May 2nd, 12:00 AM

A Deep Dive into the Relationship between Sleep Deprivation and Pain Perception: A Cross-Population Analysis

Background: Sleep deprivation and pain perception significantly impact one another through altered sleep parameters such as Total Sleep Time (TST) and Sleep Efficiency (SE). Particularly in neuropathic pain, disturbed sleep exacerbates pain by disrupting neurobiological mediators like opioids and serotonin. Our research examined how sleep loss affects pain in chronic conditions versus healthy individuals. This research underpins our analysis of how interventions, possibly nutritional, could improve sleep quality and modulate pain perception, exploring this relationship across diverse populations and conditions.

Methods: Our study reviewed peer-reviewed articles published since 2010 on sleep deprivation and pain perception. We searched PubMed, focusing on terms related to insomnia and musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain, selecting systematic reviews, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and longitudinal studies to examine the relationship across clinical and healthy populations.

Results: Our research reveals a positive correlation between chronic neck and back spinal pain with insomnia severity. There were similar associations in conditions like fibromyalgia.

Conclusion & Discussion: We found that disrupted sleep, especially decreased deep sleep stages like N3 and REM, correlates with increased pain sensitivity. Our research highlights the crucial role of restorative sleep in modulating pain, as sleep deprivation reduces the effectiveness of natural analgesics and exacerbates inflammatory response. Our research also underscores the importance of managing sleep disturbances to optimize pain control, particularly in athletes who experience reduced sleep quality due to training and stress.

 

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