Disruption of sleep by one night of in-home polysomnographic recording: a longitudinal actigraphy study of patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain and pain-free controls
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34697Date
2024-04-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Method Sleep was assessed by self-reported sleep quality and actigraphy measured sleep onset latency, sleep duration, wake after sleep onset and sleep effciency during one night of in-home PSG and the following six nights in 56 patients and 53 pain-free participants. Additionally, sleep schedule was assessed by sleep onset time, wake up time and time in bed. The repeated sleep measures were analysed with mixed model regressions, comparing mean score changes between and within groups.
Results A disruptive effect of PSG was evident for self-reported sleep quality and actigraphy measured sleep onset latency in both groups. These effects were however not significantly different between the groups, indicating comparable sensitivity to a single night of PSG between pain patients and pain-free controls.
Conclusion These findings suggest that a singlenight in-home PSG protocol may be considered for case–control studies of patients with chronic pain.