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Preliminary Evidence for the Sequentially Mediated Effect of Racism-Related Stress on Pain Sensitivity Through Sleep Disturbance and Corticolimbic Opioid Receptor Function

Authors :
Janelle E. Letzen
Carly Hunt
Hiroto Kuwabara
Lakeya S. McGill
Matthew J. Reid
Katrina R. Hamilton
Luis F. Buenaver
Emily Burton
Rosanne Sheinberg
Dean F. Wong
Michael T. Smith
Claudia M. Campbell
Source :
The journal of pain. 24(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Sleep disturbance predicts worse pain outcomes. Because sleep disturbance inequitably impacts Black adults - with racism as the upstream cause - understanding how racism-related stress impacts pain through sleep might help minimize racialized pain inequities. This preliminary study examined sequential mediation of the effect of racism-related stress on experimental pain through sleep disturbance and corticolimbic μOR function in pain-free non-Hispanic Black (NHB) and White (NHW) adults. Participants completed questionnaires, actigraphy, positron emission tomography, and sensory testing. We reproduced findings showing greater sleep disturbance and pain sensitivity among NHB participants; greater sleep disturbance (r = .35) and lower pain tolerance (r=-.37) were significantly associated with greater racism-related stress. In a sequential mediation model, the total effect of racism-related stress on pain tolerance (β=-.38, P = .005) weakened after adding sleep disturbance and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) μOR binding potential (BP

Details

ISSN :
15288447
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9127ed371eed476f9bc01bcb68f05222