对青少年手术后的睡眠、疼痛和阿片类药物使用情况进行生态学瞬间评估。

Andrew H Rogers, Jennifer A Rabbitts, Michael G Saper, Gregory A Schmale, Tonya M Palermo, Cornelius B Groenewald
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:阿片类药物可有效控制青少年手术后的急性疼痛,但也会带来严重的负面影响,包括呼吸抑制和阿片类药物滥用。手术后睡眠不足很常见,现有研究表明,睡眠不足与阿片类药物使用问题增加之间存在密切的横向联系:本研究调查了接受门诊手术的青少年术后睡眠不足与阿片类药物使用之间的纵向关系。我们还研究了作为前一晚睡眠不足与次日处方阿片类药物使用之间关联机制的日常疼痛和情绪:这项前瞻性观察研究招募了 106 名接受骨科门诊手术的青少年(11-19 岁),并收集了手术前和纵向测量数据。参与者中女性占 52%,非裔美国人(7%)、美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(7%)、西班牙裔(9%)、夏威夷原住民或其他太平洋岛民(4%)或白人、非西班牙裔(66%)。采用生态学瞬间评估方法,参与者实时报告了术后前 14 天的睡眠、疼痛和情绪情况。手术后阿片类药物的使用情况通过电子药帽监测设备 eCAPTM 进行测量。采用多层次结构方程模型测量变量之间的关联:利用多层次中介模型,在人内和人际水平上,疼痛(而非情绪)介导了手术后睡眠不足(睡眠质量、总睡眠时间、睡眠开始潜伏期和睡眠开始后唤醒)与阿片类药物使用之间的关联。结果表明,前一晚睡眠不足程度越高(一般和高于个人平均水平),第二天的疼痛程度越高(一般和高于个人平均水平),这反过来又与阿片类药物使用量越高有关。此外,人与人之间的总效应模型也支持睡眠不足可预测阿片类药物的高用量:我们的研究结果应被认为是初步的,但强调了对手术后疼痛管理和阿片类药物使用采取全面和个性化方法的必要性,有可能实施针对睡眠质量和数量的干预措施,以减少疼痛和阿片类药物的使用。
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Ecological momentary assessment of sleep, pain, and opioid use among adolescents following surgery.

Background: Opioids are effective for acute pain management following surgery among adolescents, yet are associated with significant negative consequences, including respiratory depression and opioid misuse. Sleep deficiency is common following surgery and extant research indicates strong cross-sectional associations between sleep deficiency and increased problematic opioid use.

Objective: This study examined longitudinal associations between postsurgical sleep deficiency and opioid use among adolescents undergoing outpatient surgery. We also examined daily pain and mood as mechanisms linking previous night's sleep deficiency and next day prescription opioid use.

Methods: This prospective, observational study enrolled 106 adolescents (11-19 years) who underwent orthopedic outpatient surgery and collected pre-surgery and longitudinal measurements. Participants were 52% female, African-American (7%), American Indian/Alaska Native (7%), Hispanic (9%), Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (4%), or white, non-Hispanic (66%). Using ecological momentary assessment methods, participants reported sleep, pain, and mood in real time over the first 14 days following surgery. Postsurgical opioid use was measured using an electronic medication cap monitoring device, eCAPTM. Associations between variables were measured using multilevel structural equation modeling.

Results: Using multi-level mediation models, pain, but not mood-mediated associations between postsurgical sleep deficiency (sleep quality, total sleep time, sleep onset latency, and wake after sleep onset) and opioid use, at both the within-person and between-person levels. Results highlight that greater previous night's sleep deficiency (both generally and greater than a person's mean level) was associated with higher next day pain (both generally and greater than a person's mean level), which, in turn, was associated with higher opioid use. Furthermore, between-person total effect models provide support for sleep deficiency predicting higher opioid use.

Conclusions: Our findings should be considered preliminary yet underscore the need for a comprehensive and personalized approach to postsurgical pain management and opioid use, potentially implementing interventions targeting sleep quality and quantity to reduce pain and opioid use.

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