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The Overlooked Role of Sleep in Pain, Healing, and Nervous System Regulation: What Every PT Should Know
By: By: Owen Robinson MScPT Student ∙ Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Overlooked Role of Sleep in Pain, Healing, and Nervous System Regulation

Introduction

Over the last several decades, our understanding of sleep has shifted dramatically. Sleep is no longer viewed simply as a passive state of rest but as an active, highly organized biological process with profound implications for health, healing, and pain.

For physical therapists, sleep is not optional “wellness advice”—it is a critical component of tissue repair, nervous system regulation, cognitive performance, and pain modulation. Understanding what happens during sleep can transform the way we approach assessment and treatment. Join Debbie Patterson from the Pain Science Division of the Canadian Physiotherapy Association for this on-demand course to learn more.

View the Course Here!

What Is Sleep? Defining a Complex Physiological State

Sleep has been defined in various ways over the years as research has evolved.

  • Clayman & Azerinsky (1955) described sleep as a highly organized physiological behavior marked by periods of intense brain activity that directly influence physical and mental functioning.

  • Krigeral (2011) expanded on this, describing sleep as a reversible state of perceptual disengagement and unresponsiveness to the environment.

  • A National Geographic summary defined it behaviorally as a state of diminished responsiveness and reduced mobility that is easily disrupted.

Across definitions, several core themes emerge:

1. Sleep is physiological, not optional.

Every species engages in some form of sleep—pointing to its evolutionary necessity.

2. Sleep is active, not passive.

Our brains undergo major functional changes, cycling through organized stages that each serve specific purposes.

3. Sleep is a behavior.

This implies intentional neural activity, not merely “switching off.”

Historically, sleep was viewed as a time of inactivity. We now know the opposite is true: sleep is a critical period of repair, reorganization, and metabolic housekeeping—especially for individuals with persistent pain.

Why Sleep Matters for Patients With Pain


1. Sleep Conserves Energy

During certain sleep stages, metabolic rates drop by up to 15%, allowing the body to redirect resources toward healing, recovery, and cellular regulation.

For PTs, this means that disrupted sleep directly affects tissue resilience, load tolerance, and recovery capacity.


2. Sleep Facilitates Tissue Healing and Cellular Repair

Research shows:

  • Reduced production of damaging free radicals during sleep

  • Increased protein synthesis, supporting cell regeneration

  • Optimal hormonal environments for tissue repair

For patients with tendinopathy, post-operative recovery, or chronic musculoskeletal pain, these processes are indispensable.

3. Sleep Clears Metabolic Waste From the Brain

Perhaps the most compelling recent finding is the role of sleep in neurological “housekeeping.”

When awake, neuronal density is at its highest. During sleep, however:

  • Some neurons shrink by up to 60%

  • This expands the intercellular space between neurons and glial cells

  • These enlarged spaces allow cerebrospinal fluid to wash away metabolic waste products

One of the most important waste products cleared during sleep is beta-amyloid—a protein associated with disrupted neural communication, cognitive dysfunction, and conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Without adequate sleep, the clearance of these metabolites is impaired, contributing to:

  • Increased pain sensitivity

  • Decreased cognitive clarity

  • Heightened threat responses

  • Poor motor learning and retention (key for rehab!)

For PTs teaching new movement patterns or motor skills, this is essential to understand.

Clinical Implications for Physical Therapists

1. Poor Sleep Amplifies Pain

Patients with sleep disruption show:

  • Lower pain thresholds

  • Increased inflammation

  • Reduced endogenous pain inhibition

Sleep disturbances can be both a driver and a consequence of chronic pain.

2. Sleep Quality Influences Motor Learning

Consolidation of new movement patterns occurs during sleep.
If we expect patients to absorb new motor strategies, strengthen neuromuscular control, or adopt new posture and movement habits, sleep must be part of the conversation.

3. Tissue Recovery Depends on Sleep Integrity

From post-operative rehab to high-load strengthening, the ability to repair, rebuild, and adapt is heavily sleep-dependent.

What PTs Can Do

  • Screen for sleep quality as part of routine assessment.

  • Educate patients on sleep’s role in pain and healing.

  • Collaborate with other providers when sleep issues require medical or psychological intervention.

  • Integrate pacing, load management, and nervous-system calming strategies that support better sleep.


Sleep is not outside the PT scope—it is integral to optimizing outcomes.


Conclusion

Sleep is a dynamic, biologically sophisticated process essential for healing, neural recovery, and pain modulation. As physical therapists, incorporating sleep education and screening into clinical practice isn’t optional—it’s evidence-aligned, patient-centered care.

By understanding the physiology of sleep, PTs can better address persistent pain, support tissue healing, and improve the overall efficacy of rehabilitation.

Check out Debbie Patterson's Course Here!

 

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Date published: 7 January 2026
Last update: 7 January 2026

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