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By Jennifer Warner
WebMD Medical NewsReviewed by Louise Chang, MDApril 2, 2007 -- It may come as no surprise to new parents, but getting up throughout the night may actually be painful.

A new study shows that frequent sleep disturbances, like getting up to care for a crying baby, may affect the body’s natural pain inhibitors and increase spontaneous pain among women.

“This study finds that fragmented sleep profiles, akin to individuals suffering from middle of the night insomnia, health care workers on call, and parents caring for infants, alter natural systems that regulate and control pain, and can lead to spontaneous painful symptoms," says researcher Michael T. Smith, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, in a news release.

Researchers say the results suggest that frequent sleep disturbances, not just sleep deprivation, may affect how women perceive pain and play a role in chronic pain conditions.

Sleep Disturbances May Be Painful
In the study, published in Sleep, researchers controlled the sleeping patterns of 32 healthy women for seven nights and compared their pain symptoms.

All the women slept undisturbed in a sleep lab for the first two nights. Then the women were divided into three groups for the nights three through five. The first group slept undisturbed for eight hours, the second group was awakened once an hour for eight hours, and the third group was sleep deprived with a delayed bedtime.

On the last two nights, both the disturbed sleep group and the sleep-deprived group were deprived of sleep for 36 hours followed by an 11-hour recovery sleep.

Throughout the study, researchers assessed the women’s pain thresholds and pain inhibition.

The results showed that only the women in the disturbed sleep group experienced an increase in spontaneous pain and decrease in pain inhibition.

"Our research shows that disrupted sleep, marked by multiple prolonged awakenings, impairs natural pain control mechanisms that are thought to play a key role in the development, maintenance, and exacerbation of chronic pain," says Smith.
SOURCES: Smith, M. Sleep, April 1, 2007; vol 30. News release, American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

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