Musculoskeletal pain is associated with poor sleep quality and increased daytime sleepiness in dental students: a cross-sectional pilot study.

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q3 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE Quintessence international Pub Date : 2024-11-14 DOI:10.3290/j.qi.b5826634
Linda Sangalli, Alberto Herrero Babiloni, Davis C Thomas, Anna Alessandri-Bonetti
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Abstract

Objective: While a bidirectional relationship between sleep health and musculoskeletal (MSK)-pain have been established among chronic pain patients, few studies explored it among dental students. This cross-sectional study assessed the relationship of self-report MSK-pain with sleep health and psychological outcomes among dental students, and whether differences existed as a function of number and location of painful body-sites.

Method and materials: Validated questionnaires were sent through REDCap to dental students at a predoctoral dental school, assessing presence, location (head, shoulder/neck, jaw, back, body), and intensity of MSK-pain, sleep health (risk of sleep apnea, insomnia severity symptoms, sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and chronotype), and psychological outcomes (anxiety/depression). Differences between those with and without MSK-pain, and across participants with different number and location of painful sites were tested with t-tests and ANOVA, adjusting for age/gender.

Results: Out of 80 participants (82.5% females), 76.3% reported MSK-pain (68.9% in neck/shoulders). Those with MSK-pain scored significantly worse in sleep quality (7.7±3.7 vs. 4.8±2.1, p<.001), daytime sleepiness (6.1±4.2 vs. 3.3±2.7, p<.001). Those with >3 painful body-sites reported worse sleep quality (p=.006) and daytime sleepiness (p=.003) than pain-free controls. There were no differences on sleep and psychological outcomes as a function of number of painful body-sites. Those reporting back pain scored worse in insomnia (p=.037), daytime sleepiness (p=.002), and sleep quality (p=.006) than those without back pain.

Conclusion: MSK-pain is prevalent among dental students and associated with worse sleep health. While number of painful sites may not influence sleep/psychological health, specific locations (e.g., back pain) were associated with worse sleep functioning.

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肌肉骨骼疼痛与牙科学生睡眠质量差和白天嗜睡增加有关:一项横断面试点研究。
研究目的虽然慢性疼痛患者的睡眠健康与肌肉骨骼(MSK)疼痛之间的双向关系已被证实,但很少有研究探讨牙科学生的睡眠健康与MSK疼痛之间的关系。这项横断面研究评估了牙科学生自我报告的 MSK 疼痛与睡眠健康和心理结果之间的关系,以及疼痛部位的数量和位置是否存在差异:通过 REDCap 向一所牙科博士预备学校的牙科学生发送经过验证的调查问卷,评估 MSK 疼痛的存在、位置(头部、肩颈部、下颌、背部、身体)和强度、睡眠健康(睡眠呼吸暂停风险、失眠严重程度症状、睡眠质量、白天嗜睡和时间型)以及心理结果(焦虑/抑郁)。在对年龄/性别进行调整后,采用 t 检验和方差分析对患有和未患有 MSK 疼痛的参与者之间以及不同疼痛部位数量和位置的参与者之间的差异进行了检验:在 80 名参与者(82.5% 为女性)中,76.3% 报告了 MSK 疼痛(68.9% 疼痛部位为颈部/肩部)。与无疼痛的对照组相比,患有 MSK 疼痛的人在睡眠质量(7.7±3.7 vs. 4.8±2.1,p3)和白天嗜睡(p=.003)方面的得分明显较低。疼痛部位的数量对睡眠和心理结果没有影响。与无背痛者相比,报告背痛者在失眠(p=.037)、白天嗜睡(p=.002)和睡眠质量(p=.006)方面得分较低:结论:口腔医学生中普遍存在骨骼和关节疼痛,并与睡眠质量下降有关。虽然疼痛部位的数量可能不会影响睡眠/心理健康,但特定部位(如背痛)与睡眠功能变差有关。
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来源期刊
Quintessence international
Quintessence international 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
11
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: QI has a new contemporary design but continues its time-honored tradition of serving the needs of the general practitioner with clinically relevant articles that are scientifically based. Dr Eli Eliav and his editorial board are dedicated to practitioners worldwide through the presentation of high-level research, useful clinical procedures, and educational short case reports and clinical notes. Rigorous but timely manuscript review is the first order of business in their quest to publish a high-quality selection of articles in the multiple specialties and disciplines that encompass dentistry.
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