AI Article Synopsis

  • Sleeping support systems significantly impact spinal curvature, influencing musculoskeletal health and often overlooked factors like mattress stiffness.
  • This study examined how different mattress types (soft, medium, hard) affect spinal alignment when paired with a cervical pillow, utilizing advanced electronic measurement techniques.
  • Results indicated that soft mattresses increased head distance and cervical lordosis but also heightened intervertebral disc loading, suggesting a need for thinner pillows, while hard mattresses showed reduced lumbar lordosis and increased contact pressure, potentially leading to discomfort.

Article Abstract

Sleeping support systems can influence spinal curvature, and the misalignment of the spinal curvature can lead to musculoskeletal problems. Previous sleep studies on craniocervical support focused on pillow variants, but the mattress supporting the pillow has rarely been considered. This study used a cervical pillow and three mattresses of different stiffnesses, namely soft, medium, and hard, with an indentation load deflection of 20, 42, and 120 lbs, respectively. A novel electronic curvature measurement device was adopted to measure the spinal curvature, whereby the intervertebral disc loading was computed using the finite element method. Compared with the medium mattress, the head distance increased by 30.5 ± 15.9 mm, the cervical lordosis distance increased by 26.7 ± 14.9 mm, and intervertebral disc peak loading increased by 49% in the soft mattress environment. Considering that the pillow support may increase when using a soft mattress, a softer or thinner pillow is recommended. The head distance and cervical lordosis distance in the hard mattress environment were close to the medium mattress, but the lumbar lordosis distance reduced by 10.6 ± 6.8 mm. However, no significant increase in intervertebral disc loading was observed, but contact pressure increased significantly, which could cause discomfort and health problems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9311775PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11071030DOI Listing

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