2021
DOI: 10.3390/children8010042
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Sleep among Youth with Severely Disabling Chronic Pain: Before, during, and after Inpatient Intensive Interdisciplinary Pain Treatment

Abstract: Poor sleep is commonly reported in pediatric chronic pain. There are signals that intensive interdisciplinary pain treatments (IIPT) may inadvertently improve objective sleep, but this claim cannot be substantiated without baseline sleep data prior to IIPT. This study followed the objective sleep/wake patterns (e.g., duration, quality, timing, consistency) of pediatric patients with severely functionally disabling chronic pain before, during, and after inpatient IIPT (the Functional Independence Restoration Pr… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Baseline actigraphy data prior to PENFS were not obtained due to the nature of the study. The measures generated included time in bed, total sleep time, sleep efficiency (percentage of the estimated total sleep time and time spent in bed), sleep latency (duration in minutes to fall sleep), wake after sleep onset (WASO—time spent awake after going to sleep), and sleep onset variability (each patient's personal standard deviation in sleep onset) 22‐24 …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Baseline actigraphy data prior to PENFS were not obtained due to the nature of the study. The measures generated included time in bed, total sleep time, sleep efficiency (percentage of the estimated total sleep time and time spent in bed), sleep latency (duration in minutes to fall sleep), wake after sleep onset (WASO—time spent awake after going to sleep), and sleep onset variability (each patient's personal standard deviation in sleep onset) 22‐24 …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[15][16][17][18] Sleep disturbances may be a result of pain, but have also been suggested to worsen pain in children with chronic pain conditions. [19][20][21][22][23][24] Preclinical and clinical data have shown increased pain sensitivity with sleep deprivation, and there is some suggestion that interventions directed toward sleep improve pain. [25][26][27][28] All of these factors potentially contribute to the severity of symptoms in FAPD.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…From September 2020 to September 2021, we obtained data or sufficient summary statistics for 13 studies and included them 6,19,29,43,73,80,92,99,101,119,120,141,144 in the quantitative analysis, comprising 50% of all relevant studies. Quantitative metaanalyses (including study characteristics) were presented for only those 13 studies.…”
Section: Data Collection and Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…43 All others were nonrandomized, uncontrolled longitudinal single-arm studies. The 2 exceptions were the RCT by Flack et al, 29 which was treated in this meta-analysis as a nonrandomized study with 2 sub studies, and the nonrandomized controlled study by Krietsch et al, 73 of which only the IIPT group was considered here.…”
Section: Description Of Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%