Abstract

Abstract Introduction Sleep disturbance and chronic pain are very common after moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI). Despite having a bidirectional and mutually exacerbating relationship, there is a dearth of literature examining factors involved in the sleep-pain relationship following msTBI. Psychiatric symptoms (e.g., post-traumatic stress, depression) are also prevalent following injury and know to be related to sleep, as well as poor adjustment to chronic pain. The purpose of this study was to examine associations between sleep, psychiatric symptoms, and pain-beliefs among msTBI survivors who have comorbid chronic pain. Methods This is a secondary analysis of TBI Model Systems study data of 1,567 individuals reporting chronic pain after msTBI (M=8.5 years, SD=7.1). Participants were 46.8 years old on average (SD=27.9), predominantly male (72.7%) and completed measures of sleep (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; PSQI), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD Checklist; PCL-5), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire; PHQ-9), anxiety (General Anxiety Disorder; GAD-7), pain-related catastrophizing (Coping Strategies Questionnaire; CSQ) and self-efficacy (Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire; PSEQ-2). Measures were adjusted for overlapping constructs. Relationships between sleep, psychiatric symptoms and pain beliefs were examined through Pearson correlations. Results Average PSQI total score for our sample was 8.78 (SD=4.4), indicating poor sleep quality, with an estimated 6.40 (SD=1.9) hours of sleep on average. Over two-third (68.5%) of our sample attributed some of their sleep disturbance to chronic pain and nearly half (47.4%) met cutoff (>8) for clinically significant poor sleep quality. PSQI scores were positively correlated with PCL (r = .44, p <.0001), PHQ-9 (r = .12, p <.0001), GAD-7 (r = .08, p <.01), CSQ (r = .34, p <.0001) and negatively correlated with PSEQ-2 (r = -0.23, p <.0001). Conclusion Poorer sleep quality in individuals with chronic pain after msTBI is associated with more psychiatric symptoms, increased pain-related catastrophizing, and lower pain self-efficacy. Results highlight sleep quality as an important modifiable target for intervention in this at-risk clinical population and suggest that behavioral treatments to improve psychiatric comorbidities and adjustment to pain may be beneficial. Support (if any) National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NCT03033901).

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