Inflammatory pain in mice induces light cycle-dependent effects on sleep architecture.
Dominika J BurekKhairunisa Mohamad IbrahimAndrew G HallAshish SharmaErik S MusiekJose A MorónWilliam A CarlezonPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
As a syndrome, chronic pain comprises physical, emotional, and cognitive symptoms such as disability, negative affect, feelings of stress, and fatigue. A rodent model of long-term inflammatory pain, induced by complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) injection, has previously been shown to cause anhedonia and dysregulated naturalistic behaviors, in a manner similar to animal models of stress. We examined whether this extended to alterations in circadian rhythms and sleep, such as those induced by chronic social defeat stress, using actigraphy and wireless EEG. CFA-induced inflammatory pain profoundly altered sleep architecture in male and female mice. Injection of the hind paw, whether with CFA or saline, reduced some measures of circadian rhythmicity such as variance, period, and amplitude. CFA increased sleep duration primarily in the dark phase, while sleep bout length was decreased in the light and increased in the dark phase. Additionally, CFA reduced wake bout length, especially during the dark phase. Increases in REM and SWS duration and bouts were most significant in the dark phase, regardless of whether CFA had been injected at its onset or 12 hours prior. Taken together, these results indicate that inflammatory pain acutely promotes but also fragments sleep.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- sleep quality
- physical activity
- pain management
- oxidative stress
- neuropathic pain
- mental health
- depressive symptoms
- high fat diet induced
- early stage
- type diabetes
- stress induced
- diabetic rats
- heat stress
- metabolic syndrome
- functional connectivity
- working memory
- resting state
- drug induced
- case report
- insulin resistance
- wild type