Edwards R R, Doleys D M, Fillingim R B, Lowery D
Department of Psychology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35294-1170, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2001 Mar-Apr;63(2):316-23. doi: 10.1097/00006842-200103000-00018.
Although numerous studies have independently examined ethnic differences in clinical and experimental pain, few have investigated differences in both sensitivity to controlled noxious stimuli and clinical pain reports in the same sample. The present experiment examined the effects of ethnicity (African American vs. white) on experimental pain tolerance and adjustment to chronic pain.
Three hundred thirty-seven (68 African American and 269 white) patients with chronic pain referred to a multidisciplinary treatment center participated in the study. In addition to completing a number of standardized questionnaires assessing adjustment to chronic pain, participants underwent a submaximal effort tourniquet procedure. This experimental pain procedure yields a measure of tolerance for a controlled noxious stimulus (ie, arm ischemia).
African American subjects reported higher levels of clinical pain as well as greater pain-related disability than white participants. In addition, substantial group differences were observed for ischemic pain tolerance, with African Americans demonstrating less tolerance than whites. Correlational analyses revealed a small but significant inverse relationship between ischemic pain tolerance and the reported severity of chronic pain.
Collectively these findings support previous research revealing ethnic differences in responses to both clinical and experimental pain. Moreover, the present results suggest that enhanced sensitivity to noxious stimuli on the part of African Americans may be associated with ethnic differences in reported clinical pain, although the magnitude of ethnic differences was much greater for ischemic pain tolerance than for clinical pain measures.
尽管众多研究已分别考察了临床疼痛和实验性疼痛中的种族差异,但很少有研究在同一样本中同时调查对可控有害刺激的敏感性和临床疼痛报告的差异。本实验考察了种族(非裔美国人与白人)对实验性疼痛耐受性及慢性疼痛适应的影响。
337名(68名非裔美国人与269名白人)转诊至多学科治疗中心的慢性疼痛患者参与了本研究。除完成多项评估慢性疼痛适应情况的标准化问卷外,参与者还接受了次最大用力止血带程序。该实验性疼痛程序得出了对可控有害刺激(即手臂缺血)的耐受性测量结果。
非裔美国受试者报告的临床疼痛水平以及与疼痛相关的残疾程度均高于白人参与者。此外,在缺血性疼痛耐受性方面观察到显著的组间差异,非裔美国人的耐受性低于白人。相关性分析显示,缺血性疼痛耐受性与报告的慢性疼痛严重程度之间存在小但显著的负相关关系。
总体而言,这些发现支持了先前的研究,揭示了在临床疼痛和实验性疼痛反应中的种族差异。此外,目前的结果表明,非裔美国人对有害刺激的敏感性增强可能与报告的临床疼痛中的种族差异有关,尽管种族差异在缺血性疼痛耐受性方面比在临床疼痛测量方面大得多。