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Literature review

Various types of sleep disturbance due to different sorts of low-back pain: A literature review: 3. Back pain severity, symptoms, signs, and sorts of sub-diagnosis

Pages 115-124 | Published online: 14 Jun 2015
 

Abstract

Aim

This is the third part of a literature review series of four along with a data analysis study, which seek to find out whether different types of sleep disturbance can be caused by different sorts of back pain. Here in Part 3 we review the insomnia research literature to see if any studies have been able to utilize different sorts of back pain for comparison purposes.

Methods

The same search of Medline, Embase, Psycinfo, and the OVID journals databases using the keywords ‘low-back pain’ and ‘sleep’ was used as in the previous reviews. But because there was so little relevant information available in cited journals on this topic, some unpublished data from a clinical research study were used to supplement the process.

Results

It was noted how difficult it is to measure severity of pain and how the explanation may also help explain the well-known discrepancies between subjective and objective evidence of insomnia. We then noted the paucity of attempts to distinguish different sorts of back pain from within the singular concept of non-specific low-back pain. Generally, any differences were mostly due to the variation of back pain case being recruited as a result of unquantified selection bias. Different sorts of back pain probably present to epidemiologists, general practice, casualty, physiotherapy, rheumatology, orthopaedics, pain clinics, psychiatry, and in response to public advertisement. Because of these difficulties, parts of a previously unpublished correlation matrix from our back pain classification study were explored. Aspects of sleep disturbance were related to symptoms, signs, and X-ray findings. The particular sleep disturbance features included difficulty getting off to sleep, being awoken from sleep, early morning stiffness in the back and diurnal variation in back pain. Some of the more interesting aspects of back pain relating to insomnia were identified.

Discussion

These inspections should help select promising physically based clinical items for the future study of the way in which back pain causes sleep disturbance.

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