• Pain · Jan 2011

    Behavioral and psychosocial factors associated with insomnia in adolescents with chronic pain.

    • Tonya M Palermo, Anna C Wilson, Amy S Lewandowski, Marisol Toliver-Sokol, and Caitlin B Murray.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, WA 98101, USA. tonya.palermo@seattlechildrens.org
    • Pain. 2011 Jan 1;152(1):89-94.

    AbstractThis study aimed to (1) identify differences in sleep behaviors, sleep quality, pre-sleep arousal and prevalence of insomnia symptoms in adolescents with chronic pain compared to a healthy age and sex-matched cohort and (2) examine pain intensity, pubertal development, depression, and pre-sleep arousal as risk factors for insomnia symptoms. Participants included 115 adolescents, 12-18 years of age (73.0% female), 59 youth with chronic pain and 56 healthy youth. During a home-based assessment, adolescents completed validated measures of pain, sleep quality, sleep hygiene, pre-sleep arousal, depressive symptoms, and pubertal development. Findings revealed a significantly higher percentage of adolescents with chronic pain reporting symptoms of insomnia (54.2%) compared to healthy adolescents (19.6%), p<.001. Youth with chronic pain also reported higher cognitive and somatic arousal at bedtime, and lower sleep quality compared to the healthy cohort. In a logistic regression, two factors emerged as significant predictors of insomnia, having chronic pain (OR=6.09) and higher levels of cognitive pre-sleep arousal (OR=1.24). Level of pain intensity did not predict insomnia. While sleep disruption may initially relate to pain, these symptoms may persist into a separate primary sleep disorder over time due to other behavioral and psychosocial factors. Assessment of insomnia may be important for identifying behavioral targets for the delivery of sleep-specific interventions to youth with chronic pain.Copyright © 2010 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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