The goal of this clinical study is to study sleep and its microstructure in neuropathic pain patients who have or who do not have a clinically significant sleep disturbance, before and during (after 1-month stabile dosage) pregabalin treatment. To find out whether reduced pain by pregabalin associates with improved sleep quality; to study, using resting state fMRI, brain network connectivity and the volume of the choroid plexus before and during pregabalin treatment (after dosage stable for one month) at baseline and during stabile treatment with pregabalin, and to compare the usability and reliability of sleep-related information collected with sleep diaries, actigraphy, iButtons, and ambulatory polysomnography in peripheral painful neuropathy patients. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is pregabalin more efficacious in neuropathic pain patients who suffer from insomnia compared to those with no clinically meaningful sleep disturbance? * Does sleep disturbance due to pain associate with brain network connectivity and may these changes be reversed by pregabalin treatment? Participants will * Fulfill e-questionnaires and keep sleep diary before and after 1month stabile pregabalin intervention * Before and after 1-month stabile pregabalin medication: 1-week Actiwatch monitoring, iButton (1 day and night), ambulatory polysomnography (1 night), brain fMRI. Researchers will compare patients with high ISI score patients to see if they benefit more from pregabalin treatment than those with low ISI score.
This is a clinical study to analyze sleep and pain and their response to pregabalin in 40 patients aged 18 to 75 years with chronic (duration\>3 months) moderate to severe pain (NRS ≥ 4/10) due to peripheral neuropathy. The investigators divide patients to two groups according to scores in ISI: the ones with clinically significant insomnia with score 15 or more (ISI High) and the ones without marked insomnia with score 14 or lower (ISI Low). Sleep will be assessed by a sleep diary, iButton, polysomnography and 1-week Actiwatch monitoring before and after 1-month stabile pregabalin dosage. Additionally, at these time points, several questionnaires regarding pain, sleep, mood, and quality of life and functional brain MRI will be performed. At pregabalin administration, the dose is added three to four day intervals, if tolerated by the patient. After a maximum tolerated dose has been stable for 1 month, the sleep studies, questionnaires, and brain fMRI are repeated. The study duration is about 3 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
40
Pregabalin administration and titration to the highest dosage that the patient tolerates. The patient continues with the highest dose for one month and the pre-intervention studies are repeated.
Helsinki University Central Hospital
Helsinki, HUS, Finland
RECRUITINGHelsinki University Hospital, Department of Neurology
Helsinki, Uusimaa, Finland
RECRUITINGPregabalin response to pain
Pain intensity and interference assessed by numeric rating scale
Time frame: Change from baseline pain intensity and interference immediately after the intervention
Pregabalin effect on sleep stages
1-night Ambulatory Polysomnography (NREM stage III)
Time frame: Change from baseline immediately after the intervention
Sleep disturbance associations to brain network connectivity
Brain fMRI for brain network connectivity
Time frame: Change from baseline immediately after the intervention
Sleep disturbance associations to choroid plexus volume in brain fMRI
Brain fMRI for choroid plexus volume measures
Time frame: Change from baseline immediately after the intervention
Pregabalin effect on circadian rhythms
1-week actigraphy
Time frame: Change from baseline immediately after the intervention
Pregabalin effect on body temperature during sleep
1-night body temperature measurement by iButton
Time frame: Change from baseline immediately after the intervention
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