Chronic pain and depressive disorders differentially impact older adults and both conditions are often intractable, underscoring the need to investigate modifiable risk factors and better elucidate the pathophysiology of these disorders. Insomnia, a cardinal symptom of both disorders, is modifiable, yet it is not known how insomnia influences biological and central nervous system factors that increase risk for chronic pain. This knowledge is critical for refining insomnia and chronic pain management therapies to target alterations in central pain processing that contribute to chronic pain risk and morbidity. Given that insomnia and sleep disturbance activate inflammatory signaling, the proposed study hypothesizes that inflammation is a common biological substrate that dynamically links insomnia and affective disturbance with alterations in two dimensions of central pain processing associated with chronic pain risk, i.e. central sensitization (CS) and affective pain modulation (APM). Animal models demonstrate that inflammation heightens pain sensitivity and induces neuroplastic alterations that increase the responsivity of CNS nociceptive neurons to normal or subthreshold afferent input, i.e., CS. Inflammation also induces affective disturbances that may modulate and amplify pain perception (APM). Low dose endotoxin administration safely and transiently induces affective disturbance and emerging studies suggest this inflammatory challenge may alter CS. Hence, we will investigate whether insomnia, alone or combined with an experimental inflammatory challenge (endotoxin) alters CS and APM in older adults. This proposal synergizes with a newly funded study [(R01 AG051944 (Irwin)] of differences in depressive symptoms and negative and positive affect responding as a function of insomnia and inflammatory challenge. We will study a subset (N=148) of participants in this parent study of older adults with (N=74) and without (N=74) insomnia who will complete a comprehensive assessment of pain processing (CS and APM) following exposure to endotoxin vs. placebo. To further establish the translational promise of this experimental model of chronic pain risk, we will add electronic diary assessments of daily pain and depressive symptoms at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. We will address four aims: 1) Evaluate differences in indices of central sensitization (CS) as a function of insomnia and experimental endotoxin exposure; 2) Evaluate differences in affective pain modulation (APM) as a function of insomnia and experimental endotoxin exposure and determine the extent to which endotoxin-induced affective disturbance accounts for alterations in CS and APM; 3) Determine whether individual differences in the endotoxin-induced inflammatory response are associated with alterations in CS and APM, as a function of insomnia and 4) Determine the extent to which the endotoxin-induced inflammatory response and/or alterations in CS, APM, and affective disturbance predict daily self-reported pain and depressive symptoms over the course of 1 year, as a function of insomnia. These data will be instrumental in developing novel prevention and treatment approaches for chronic pain and depression.

Public Health Relevance

This study examines the role of inflammation as a biological mechanism linking insomnia and changes in mood with alterations in pain processing. We will test whether an inflammatory challenge transiently changes pain processing, whether these changes are more pronounced in older adults with insomnia and whether the response to the inflammatory challenge predicts long-term pain and depressive symptoms. The data will be instrumental in developing novel prevention and treatment approaches for chronic pain and depression, which are two poorly understood, intractable conditions and the leading causes of disability worldwide.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AG057750-03
Application #
9905388
Study Section
Biobehavioral Mechanisms of Emotion, Stress and Health Study Section (MESH)
Program Officer
Stoeckel, Luke
Project Start
2018-08-15
Project End
2023-03-31
Budget Start
2020-04-15
Budget End
2021-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21205