Abstract
Both chronic pain and sleep disorders are associated with a reduction in the quality of life. They can be both a cause and a consequence of each other, and should therefore be simultaneously treated. However, optimal treatments for chronic pain-related sleep disorders are not well established. Here, we aimed to investigate the effects of suvorexant, a novel sleep drug, and mirtazapine, a noradrenergic and specific serotonergic antidepressant, on pain-related changes in sleep parameters in a preclinical chronic pain mice model, by partial sciatic nerve ligation. We evaluated the quantity, duration, and depth of sleep by analyzing the electroencephalogram and voluntary activity by counting the number of wheel rotations to determine various symptoms of sleep disorders, including reduced total sleep time, fragmentation, low quality, and impaired activity in the daytime. Suvorexant and mirtazapine normalized the reduction in sleep time and fragmented sleep, further regaining the sleep depth at sleep onset in the chronic pain state in nerve-ligated mice. Mirtazapine also increased the percentage of rapid eye movement sleep in mice. Suvorexant decreased voluntary activity, which was prolonged after administration; however, mirtazapine did not decrease it. Although the effects of suvorexant and mirtazapine on sleep and activity are different, both suvorexant and mirtazapine could be potential therapeutic agents for chronic pain-related sleep disorders.
Highlights
Chronic pain is pain that persists past normal healing time and is usually regarded as chronic when it lasts for more than 3 to 6 months [1]
Suvorexant administration improved the reduction of threshold in the von Frey test (PSNL-vehicle vs. PSNLsuvorexant: 4.98 s vs. 10.1 s, P < 0.0001 at day 13; Fig 2a); the effect did not last until the day
partial sciatic nerve ligation (PSNL) reduced the number of wheel rotations (Fig 6), indicating that sleep was shortened and fragmented, the rhythm of sleep depth was lost, and arousal and voluntary activity were impaired due to chronic pain caused by nerve injury
Summary
Chronic pain is pain that persists past normal healing time and is usually regarded as chronic when it lasts for more than 3 to 6 months [1]. Chronic pain often leads to further psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and depression, which significantly affect the health-related quality of life [2–4]. Suvorexant and mirtazapine improve pain-related sleep parameters
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