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ABSTRACT: The relationship between fatigue and sleep in cancer
patients: a review
Fatigue is a major complaint among cancer patients, yet it is
unknown whether cancer-related fatigue experienced during
the day relates to sleep/wake cycles or to the quality
and quantity of sleep obtained at night.
Although it is not well
defined or well understood at present, cancer-related fatigue is
generally regarded as a form of tiredness that does not improve
following rest or sleep. Objectively recorded sleep and
biological rhythms have not been well investigated in these
patients, but it appears that most cancer patients may in fact
not be getting a good night's sleep.
Evidence is accumulating
that sleep is often disturbed in cancer patients, probably owing
to a variety of causes.
We posit that some degree of cancer-related
fatigue experienced during the day may relate to sleep/wake cycles
or to the quality and quantity of sleep obtained at night. Different
components or dimensions of fatigue (physical, attentional/cognitive,
emotional/affective, etc.) are probably associated in some way
with disrupted sleep and desynchronized sleep/wake rhythms.
These associations may change in measurable ways prior to treatment,
during treatment and after treatment completion. In cancer
patients, as in other medically ill patients, sleep that is
inadequate or unrefreshing may be important not only to the expression
of fatigue, but to the patients' quality of life and their tolerance
to treatment, and may influence the development of mood disorders
and clinical depression.
This review summarizes the state of the
literature on fatigue, sleep and circadian rhythms.
[01/09/2002; European Journal of Cancer Care]
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