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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of clinical sleep medicine: JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine >Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia improves sleep and decreases pain in older adults with co-morbid insomnia and osteoarthritis.
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Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia improves sleep and decreases pain in older adults with co-morbid insomnia and osteoarthritis.

机译:失眠的认知行为疗法可改善患有合并症的失眠和骨关节炎的老年人的睡眠并减少疼痛。

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STUDY OBJECTIVES: Osteoarthritis pain affects more than half of all older adults, many of whom experience co-morbid sleep disturbance. Pain initiates and exacerbates sleep disturbance, whereas disturbed sleep maintains and exacerbates pain, which implies that improving the sleep of patients with osteoarthritis may also reduce their pain. We examined this possibility in a secondary analysis of a previously published randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) in patients with osteoarthritis and co-morbid insomnia. METHODS: Twenty-three patients (mean age 69.2 years) were randomly assigned to CBT-I and 28 patients (mean age 66.5 years) to an attention control. Neither directly addressed pain management. Twelve subjects crossed over to CBT-I after control treatment. Sleep and pain were assessed by self-report at baseline, after treatment, and (for CBT-I only) at 1-year follow-up. RESULTS: CBT-I subjects reported significantly improved sleep and significantly reduced pain after treatment. Control subjects reported no significant improvements. One-year follow-up found maintenance of improved sleep and reduced pain for both the CBT-I group alone and among subjects who crossed over from control to CBT-I. CONCLUSIONS: CBT-I but not an attention control, without directly addressing pain control, improved both immediate and long-term self-reported sleep and pain in older patients with osteoarthritis and comorbid insomnia. These results are unique in suggesting the long-term durability of CBT-I effects for co-morbid insomnia. They also indicate that improving sleep, per se, in patients with osteoarthritis may result in decreased pain. Techniques to improve sleep may be useful additions to pain management programs in osteoarthritis, and possibly other chronic pain conditions as well.
机译:研究目标:骨关节炎疼痛影响着超过一半的老年人,其中许多人患有并存的睡眠障碍。疼痛会引发并加剧睡眠障碍,而睡眠障碍会维持并加剧疼痛,这意味着改善骨关节炎患者的睡眠也可以减轻疼痛。我们在先前发表的针对骨关节炎和合并症的失眠症的失眠症认知行为疗法(CBT-1)的随机对照试验的二级分析中,检查了这种可能性。方法:将23例患者(平均年龄69.2岁)随机分配至CBT-I,将28例患者(平均年龄66.5岁)随机分配至注意对照。两者均未直接解决疼痛管理。对照治疗后,十二名受试者转入CBT-1。通过基线时,治疗后和(仅针对CBT-1)自我报告评估睡眠和疼痛(仅针对CBT-1)。结果:CBT-1受试者报告治疗后睡眠明显改善,疼痛明显减轻。对照对象报告无明显改善。一年的随访发现,无论是单独的CBT-I组,还是从对照转为CBT-I的受试者,其睡眠均得到改善,疼痛减轻。结论:CBT-I但不直接进行注意力控制,而不能进行注意力控制,可以改善老年骨关节炎和合并症失眠患者的即刻和长期自我报告的睡眠和疼痛。这些结果是独特的,表明了CBT-1对合并症的长期失眠具有长期的持久性。他们还表明,骨关节炎患者改善睡眠本身可能会减轻疼痛。改善睡眠的技术可能是骨关节炎疼痛管理计划中有用的补充,可能还包括其他慢性疼痛状况。

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