4.6 Article

Sleep characteristics and pain in middle-aged and older adults: Sex-specific impact of physical and sitting activity

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 111, Issue -, Pages 180-190

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2023.09.030

Keywords

Health; Physical activity; Sitting; Insomnia; Chronic pain; Arousal; Sex; Gender

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examined the sex-specific associations between physical activity, sleep characteristics, and pain intensity. The results suggest that vigorous physical activity may exacerbate the association between pre-sleep arousal and pain in middle-aged and older women.
Objectives: The relationship between poor sleep health and worse pain is established. Physical activity has been successful in reducing chronic pain and improving sleep in aging adults. Despite known sex differences (more women than men experiencing chronic pain and insomnia), sex-specific patterns of interactive associations between physical activity, sleep, and pain remain unexplored. This study tested whether physical and sitting activity moderated associations between sleep characteristics and pain intensity, and whether sex further moderated these relationships.Methods: Participants aged 50+ (N = 170, Mage = 64.34, 72 women) completed an online survey measuring presleep arousal (Pre-sleep Arousal Scale), sleep (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index), past month average pain intensity, and physical activity (International Physical Activity Questionnaire). Multiple regressions evaluated whether minutes of physical activity (total, vigorous, moderate, walking) or sitting activity, pre-sleep arousal, sleep, sex, or their interaction was associated with pain. Analyses controlled for education, difficulty walking, body mass index, total medical conditions, pain medication, and depressive/anxiety symptoms. Results: In women, vigorous activity interacted with total pre-sleep arousal and somatic pre-sleep arousal in its association with pain. Higher total arousal and somatic arousal were associated with worse pain intensity only for women who reported highest levels of vigorous activity. No such associations were observed for men or for other physical or sitting activity levels.Conclusions: Vigorous physical activity may exacerbate the association between more pre-sleep arousal and worse pain in middle-aged and older women. Research should explore potential sex-specific mechanisms (e.g., inflammatory cytokines, arousal neural networks) underlying these results.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available