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Chronic Sleep Deficiency and Its Impact on Pain Perception in Healthy Females

Overview
Journal J Sleep Res
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2024 Jul 7
PMID 38972675
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Abstract

Acute sleep deprivation in experimental studies has been shown to induce pain hypersensitivity in females. However, the impact of natural sleep deficiency and fluctuations across the week on pain perception remains unclear. A sleep-monitoring headband and self-reports were utilized to assess objective and subjective sleep in longer (> 6 hr) and short sleepers (< 6 hr). Pain sensitivity measures including heat, cold, pressure pain thresholds, pain inhibition (conditioned pain modulation) and facilitation (tonic pain summation) were assessed on Mondays and Fridays. Forty-one healthy young (23.9 ± 0.74 years) women participated. Short sleepers slept on average 2 hr less than longer sleepers (297.9 ± 8.2 min versus 418.5 ± 10.9 min) and experienced impaired pain inhibitory response (mean = -21.14 ± 7.9°C versus mean = 15.39 ± 9.5°C; p = 0.005). However, no effect was observed in pain thresholds and pain summation (p > 0.05). Furthermore, pain modulatory responses differed between Mondays and Fridays. Chronic sleep deficiency (< 6 hr) compromises pain responses, notably on Mondays. Maintaining a consistent sleep pattern with sufficient sleep (> 6 hr) throughout the week may protect against pain sensitization and the development of chronic pain in females. Further research is needed, especially in patients with chronic pain.

Citing Articles

Painful Mondays: Exploring Weekly Sleep Variations and Pain Perception in Healthy Women-An Experimental Study.

Rouhi S, Egorova-Brumley N, Jordan A Eur J Pain. 2025; 29(4):e70004.

PMID: 40047431 PMC: 11884311. DOI: 10.1002/ejp.70004.


Chronic sleep deficiency and its impact on pain perception in healthy females.

Rouhi S, Egorova-Brumley N, Jordan A J Sleep Res. 2024; 34(1):e14284.

PMID: 38972675 PMC: 11744235. DOI: 10.1111/jsr.14284.

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