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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Pain, sleep disturbance, and fatigue in patients with cancer: using a mediation model to test a symptom cluster

TLDR
Mediation analyses indicate that pain influences fatigue directly as well as indirectly by its effect on sleep, and strategies to improve sleep by better pain management may contribute to decreased fatigue.
Abstract
Purpose/Objectives: To test whether sleep disturbance mediates the effect of pain on fatigue. Design: Cross-sectional Setting: Radiation therapy clinic, oncology ambulatory clinic, and inpatient oncology unit in an urban teaching hospital. Sample: 84 patients with cancer with multiple primary diagnoses who were experiencing pain. Fifty-three percent were female and 92% were Caucasian, with a mean age of 54 years. Methods: All participants completed a symptom questionnaire that included the brief pain inventory – short form, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and the fatigue subscale of the Profile of Mood States questionnaire. Multistage linear regression was used to test a mediation model. Main Research Variables: Fatigue, pain, and sleep disturbance. Findings: Mediation analyses indicate that pain influences fatigue directly as well as indirectly by its effect on sleep. About 20% (adjusted R2 = 0.20) of the variation in fatigue is explained by pain. Thirty-five percent of the variance in fatigue explained by pain was accounted for by the mediation pathway. Conclusions: Some of the effect of pain on fatigue is mediated by sleep disturbance, but pain has a direct effect on fatigue as well. Implications for Nursing: Although the relationship can be explained only partially by the commonsense point of view that people who are in pain lose sleep and naturally report more fatigue, this finding is important and leads to a potential intervention opportunity. Strategies to improve sleep by better pain management may contribute to decreased fatigue.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Update on Prevalence of Pain in Patients With Cancer: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: Despite increased attention on assessment and management, pain continues to be a prevalent symptom in patients with cancer and in the upcoming decade, the authors need to overcome barriers toward effective pain treatment and develop and implement interventions to optimally manage pain in Patients with cancer.
Journal Article

Brief introduction to second edition of International Classification of Sleep Disorders:Diagnostic and Coding Manual

TL;DR: The updated version of ICSD-2 was characterized by the significant improvements of its logicality and clinical practicability, and was more consistent with the International Classification of Disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Pharmaceutical, Psychological, and Exercise Treatments for Cancer-Related Fatigue: A Meta-analysis

TL;DR: A meta-analysis to establish and compare the mean weighted effect sizes of the 4 most commonly recommended treatments for CRF—exercise, psychological, combined exercise and psychological, and pharmaceutical—and to identify independent variables associated with treatment effectiveness suggests Exercise and psychological interventions are effective for reducing CRF during and after cancer treatment.
Book ChapterDOI

What is Cancer

Sonya Leff
TL;DR: This chapter discusses different aspects of cancer, a group of many different disorders affecting the different parts of the body, and cancer of one part is quite different from cancer of another part.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer-Related Fatigue and Sleep Disorders

TL;DR: The majority of studies that have assessed both sleep and fatigue in patients with cancer provide evidence supporting a strong correlation between cancer-related fatigue and various sleep parameters, including poor sleep quality, disrupted initiation and maintenance of sleep, nighttime awakening, restless sleep, and excessive daytime sleepiness.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.

TL;DR: This article seeks to make theorists and researchers aware of the importance of not using the terms moderator and mediator interchangeably by carefully elaborating the many ways in which moderators and mediators differ, and delineates the conceptual and strategic implications of making use of such distinctions with regard to a wide range of phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index: A new instrument for psychiatric practice and research.

TL;DR: The clinimetric and clinical properties of the PSQI suggest its utility both in psychiatric clinical practice and research activities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The International Classification of Sleep Disorders: Diagnostic and Coding Manual

Robert B. Daroff
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TL;DR: This outstanding manual is more than an outline; it includes diagnostic criteria, clinical course, predisposing factors, prevalence, differential diagnosis, and a bibliography for each of the numerous disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Process Analysis: Estimating Mediation in Treatment Evaluations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the rationale and procedures for conducting a process analysis in evaluation research, which attempts to identify the process that mediates the effects of some treatment, by estimating the parameters of a causal chain between the treatment and some outcome variable.
Journal ArticleDOI

The International Classification of Sleep Disorders

TL;DR: The International Classification of Sleep Disorders is the product of 5 years' concerted effort on the part of the Diagnostic Classification Steering Committee of the American Sleep Disorders Association to produce a comprehensive and usable classification system.
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