脑预测的年龄差异介导了PROMIS睡眠障碍和膝关节疼痛患者自我报告疼痛测量之间的关联

IF 1.7 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Aging brain Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.nbas.2023.100088
Soamy Montesino-Goicolea , Pedro Valdes-Hernandez , Chavier Laffitte Nodarse , Alisa J. Johnson , James H. Cole , Lisa H. Antoine , Burel R. Goodin , Roger B. Fillingim , Yenisel Cruz-Almeida
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摘要

膝关节疼痛是肌肉骨骼疼痛(MSK)的最常见原因,构成了严重的公共卫生负担。然而,其神经生物学原因仍然知之甚少。在许多可能的原因中,有人提出睡眠问题可能导致慢性疼痛症状的增加,这可能是由中枢神经系统的变化驱动的。事实上,我们之前发现大脑皮质厚度介导了老年MSK患者睡眠质量和疼痛严重程度之间的关系。我们还证明了机器学习衍生的脑老化生物标志物在低冲击和高冲击膝关节疼痛的参与者之间存在显著差异。考虑到这一点,我们研究了大脑衰老是否与自我报告的睡眠和疼痛测量有关,以及大脑衰老是否介导了睡眠问题和膝盖疼痛之间的关系。探索性的斯皮尔曼和皮尔逊部分相关性,控制了年龄、性别、种族和研究地点,显示出大脑衰老与睡眠相关损伤和自我报告的疼痛测量有显著关联。此外,中介分析显示,脑老化显著介导睡眠相关损害对临床疼痛和身体症状的影响。我们的研究结果扩展了我们之前的工作,证明慢性疼痛患者的大脑衰老程度较高,大脑衰老在睡眠和疼痛严重程度之间的关联中起着中介作用。未来的纵向研究需要进一步了解大脑是否可以成为一个治疗目标,以扭转睡眠问题对慢性疼痛的可能影响。
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Brain-predicted age difference mediates the association between PROMIS sleep impairment, and self-reported pain measure in persons with knee pain

Knee pain, the most common cause of musculoskeletal pain (MSK), constitutes a severe public health burden. Its neurobiological causes, however, remain poorly understood. Among many possible causes, it has been proposed that sleep problems could lead to an increase in chronic pain symptomatology, which may be driven by central nervous system changes. In fact, we previously found that brain cortical thickness mediated the relationship between sleep qualities and pain severity in older adults with MSK. We also demonstrated a significant difference in a machine-learning-derived brain-aging biomarker between participants with low-and high-impact knee pain. Considering this, we examined whether brain aging was associated with self-reported sleep and pain measures, and whether brain aging mediated the relationship between sleep problems and knee pain. Exploratory Spearman and Pearson partial correlations, controlling for age, sex, race and study site, showed a significant association of brain aging with sleep related impairment and self-reported pain measures. Moreover, mediation analysis showed that brain aging significantly mediated the effect of sleep related impairment on clinical pain and physical symptoms. Our findings extend our prior work demonstrating advanced brain aging among individuals with chronic pain and the mediating role of brain-aging on the association between sleep and pain severity. Future longitudinal studies are needed to further understand whether the brain can be a therapeutic target to reverse the possible effect of sleep problems on chronic pain.

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Aging brain
Aging brain Neuroscience (General), Geriatrics and Gerontology
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