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Medicineworld.org: Sleeplessness leads to increased cancer pain
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Sleeplessness leads to increased cancer pain
A study in the April 15 issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine suggests that sleep problems lead to increased pain and fatigue in cancer patients. The results indicate that interventions aimed at trouble sleeping would be expected to improve both pain and fatigue in this patient population.
As per the authors, the relationship between pain and sleep often has been assumed to be reciprocal. In the present study, however, a model of reciprocal causation could not be fit to the data, and models in which pain caused trouble sleeping did not fit as well as the model in which trouble sleeping caused pain. "We believed we would find a bi-directional relationship between insomnia and pain, but instead observed that trouble sleeping was more likely a cause, rather than a consequence, of pain in patients with cancer," said main author Edward J. Stepanski, chief operational officer at the Accelerated Community Oncology Research Network in Memphis, Tenn. The study included demographic, clinical and patient-reported outcomes data from 11,445 cancer patients undergoing therapy at the West Clinic, a large community oncology practice in Memphis. Participants had an average age of 61.5 years, and 74 percent were female. Breast cancer was the most common form of cancer, and about 25 percent of study subjects had received chemotherapy in the last 30 days. Increases in depressed mood also led to increased ratings of pain. Younger age and recent administration of chemotherapy were both linked to increased trouble sleeping. As per the authors, younger patients often receive more aggressive chemotherapy than older patients; therefore, younger patients appears to be exposed to more therapy-correlation toxicity. Stepanski stated that several studies have shown that cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) improves sleep in cancer patients who have insomnia. He believes that this type of intervention may decrease patients' pain and fatigue by improving their sleep. Posted by: Janet Source
Did you know?
A study in the April 15 issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine suggests that sleep problems lead to increased pain and fatigue in cancer patients. The results indicate that interventions aimed at trouble sleeping would be expected to improve both pain and fatigue in this patient population.
Medicineworld.org: Sleeplessness leads to increased cancer pain
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