Sleep and back pain: the two-way relationship and how to improve both
Poor sleep making your back pain worse — or back pain disrupting your sleep?
The myBackPain assessment identifies the sleep component of your back pain and includes specific guidance on position, mattress choice, and sleep hygiene as part of your personalised report. Results in minutes.
How poor sleep amplifies pain
Sleep and back pain have a profound two-way relationship. Poor sleep amplifies pain sensitivity; pain disrupts sleep. This bidirectional cycle is one of the most important and most commonly overlooked factors in the persistence of back pain. Addressing sleep is not separate from treating back pain — it is part of it.
During deep sleep, the body performs essential repair and maintenance functions. Sleep deprivation disrupts these processes and directly increases pain sensitivity through several mechanisms:
- Increases levels of inflammatory cytokines, amplifying the inflammatory component of pain
- Reduces the efficiency of the brain’s natural pain dampening system
- Increases cortisol, which over time amplifies central sensitisation
- Impairs cognitive function, including the ability to manage pain psychologically
- Increases fatigue, which lowers pain threshold and reduces motivation for rehabilitation
Why back pain disrupts sleep
Improving sleep with back pain
Sleep position
Side-lying with a pillow between the knees reduces rotational strain on the lower back — the best position for most back pain types. Lying on your back with a pillow under the knees reduces disc pressure. Avoid prone (face-down) sleeping if it aggravates symptoms.
Mattress and pillow
Medium-firm mattresses consistently outperform very firm or very soft mattresses for back pain. A mattress that allows the spine to remain in neutral alignment when lying on your side is ideal. If you wake with more pain than when you went to bed, your sleep surface is a likely contributor.
Sleep hygiene
Consistent sleep and wake times, avoiding screens in the 30–60 minutes before bed, a cool and dark room, and avoiding caffeine after 2pm. These are not optional extras — they are clinically significant in the context of pain and sensitisation.
Address the pain itself
Appropriate pain management — anti-inflammatory medication, manual therapy, and exercise — reduces the nocturnal pain that disrupts sleep. Treating the back pain and treating the sleep problem must go together.
Poor sleep and back pain feeding each other?
The myBackPain assessment includes sleep as a clinical factor and provides specific guidance on breaking the sleep-pain cycle.