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Poor sleep and depression are independently associated with a reduced pain threshold. Results of a population based study

Poor sleep and depression are independently associated with a reduced pain threshold. Results of a population based study
Poor sleep and depression are independently associated with a reduced pain threshold. Results of a population based study

To determine the relative contributions of psychological factors and sleep disturbance to reduced pain threshold we conducted a cross-sectional two-phase population-based study. A total of 424 subjects were recruited, stratified by pain and distress status. Subjects completed a postal questionnaire that asked about current pain and covered aspects of psychological status and sleep disturbance. Samples of subjects stratified by the extent of bodily pain they reported and psychological status were invited to participate in an examination of pain threshold. The association between psychological status, sleep disturbance and a low pain threshold was examined using ordinal regression. High levels of psychological distress (OR=1.6, 95% CI (1.02, 2.5)), disturbed sleep (OR=2.2, 95% CI (1.4, 3.5)) and high scores on the HAD depression scale (OR=2.1, 95% CI (1.3, 3.2)) were all associated with having a low pain threshold. In multivariate analysis disturbed sleep and depression remained independently associated with a low pain threshold. These relationships persisted after adjustment for pain status. This study had demonstrated that depression and poor sleep are associated with a reduced pain threshold.

Depression, Pain threshold, Psychological, Sleep
0304-3959
316-321
Chiu, Y.H.
5e07bd25-bfae-479b-afc5-a1ed9db36359
Silman, A.J.
1ab1fc13-51f5-44c8-92f1-0bb32a5c5754
Macfarlane, G.J.
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c
Ray, D.
5ed234c6-4431-4293-acf2-25de1f7e0981
Gupta, A.
2ef49e58-f9e2-4142-bf0a-aaa1ac8bfdc5
Dickens, C.
a41afee4-9852-4e66-a96d-938151d8fd3a
Morriss, R.
30d5dc2c-4140-4181-9bbd-a70c6c9dcb17
McBeth, J.
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Chiu, Y.H.
5e07bd25-bfae-479b-afc5-a1ed9db36359
Silman, A.J.
1ab1fc13-51f5-44c8-92f1-0bb32a5c5754
Macfarlane, G.J.
e17bbdb7-9d82-42ac-8a0a-09bf10885e3c
Ray, D.
5ed234c6-4431-4293-acf2-25de1f7e0981
Gupta, A.
2ef49e58-f9e2-4142-bf0a-aaa1ac8bfdc5
Dickens, C.
a41afee4-9852-4e66-a96d-938151d8fd3a
Morriss, R.
30d5dc2c-4140-4181-9bbd-a70c6c9dcb17
McBeth, J.
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61

Chiu, Y.H., Silman, A.J., Macfarlane, G.J., Ray, D., Gupta, A., Dickens, C., Morriss, R. and McBeth, J. (2005) Poor sleep and depression are independently associated with a reduced pain threshold. Results of a population based study. Pain, 115 (3), 316-321. (doi:10.1016/j.pain.2005.03.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

To determine the relative contributions of psychological factors and sleep disturbance to reduced pain threshold we conducted a cross-sectional two-phase population-based study. A total of 424 subjects were recruited, stratified by pain and distress status. Subjects completed a postal questionnaire that asked about current pain and covered aspects of psychological status and sleep disturbance. Samples of subjects stratified by the extent of bodily pain they reported and psychological status were invited to participate in an examination of pain threshold. The association between psychological status, sleep disturbance and a low pain threshold was examined using ordinal regression. High levels of psychological distress (OR=1.6, 95% CI (1.02, 2.5)), disturbed sleep (OR=2.2, 95% CI (1.4, 3.5)) and high scores on the HAD depression scale (OR=2.1, 95% CI (1.3, 3.2)) were all associated with having a low pain threshold. In multivariate analysis disturbed sleep and depression remained independently associated with a low pain threshold. These relationships persisted after adjustment for pain status. This study had demonstrated that depression and poor sleep are associated with a reduced pain threshold.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 March 2005
Published date: June 2005
Keywords: Depression, Pain threshold, Psychological, Sleep

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492391
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492391
ISSN: 0304-3959
PURE UUID: 95839457-f332-4597-97bc-6685d43c5935
ORCID for J. McBeth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7047-2183

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Date deposited: 25 Jul 2024 16:58
Last modified: 26 Jul 2024 02:12

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Contributors

Author: Y.H. Chiu
Author: A.J. Silman
Author: G.J. Macfarlane
Author: D. Ray
Author: A. Gupta
Author: C. Dickens
Author: R. Morriss
Author: J. McBeth ORCID iD

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