Abstract
Although the understanding of pain mechanism and management has made substantial progress, postoperative pain relief is still an important health care problem. Surgical patients also often report preoperative and postoperative sleep problems. Clinical and experimental studies show that chronic pain and sleep disorders influence each other. Pain disturbs sleep, and sleep deprivation or sleep disorders increase pain. However, there are still many problems about the direction of causality between them and the mechanism that may explain their relationship. In-depth subjective and objective evaluation of pain and sleep supports the view that sleep disorder is a more powerful and reliable predictor of pain, and pain is a predictor of sleep disorder. Recent progress in multimodal imaging, molecular biology, and neural circuit analysis has uncovered how sleep deprivation - especially in the perioperative setting - influences pain sensitivity, the transition to chronic pain, and brain function through mechanisms spanning peripheral nerves, the spinal cord, subcortical areas, and cortical structures.