McBeth J, Morris S, Benjamin S, Silman A J, Macfarlane G J
Arthritis Research Campaign Epidemiology Unit, School of Epidemiology and Health Sciences, University of Manchester, United Kingdom.
J Rheumatol. 2001 Oct;28(10):2305-9.
Clinic based studies suggest that adverse events in childhood may predispose to chronic pain in adult life. These have been conducted on highly selected groups, and it is unknown whether these relationships hold in the general population and to what extent the increased rate of adverse childhood events in persons with pain is an artefact of differential reporting. We examined the hypothesis that chronic widespread pain was associated with reports of adverse experiences in childhood and whether any observed relationships could be explained by differential recall.
A cross sectional population based screening survey was conducted. Subjects completed a questionnaire that included assessments of pain and psychological state. In total, 296 subjects who had demonstrated psychological distress were randomly selected and had a detailed interview, which included an assessment of 14 adverse childhood experiences. Medical records relating to childhood were also examined for those subjects.
The prevalence of self-reported adverse childhood experiences was greatest in adult subjects with current chronic widespread pain. Exposure to illness in family members, parental loss, operations, and abuse were all associated with increased, but nonsignificant, odds of having chronic widespread pain versus those without such exposures. However the only statistically significant association was with childhood hospitalizations. From medical record information the associations of hospitalizations (OR 5.1, 95% CI 2.0-13.0) and operations (OR 3.0, 95% CI 1.2-7.2) with pain previously noted were partly explained by differential recall between subjects with and without pain: hospitalizations, OR 2.2, 95% CI 0.9-5.5; operations, OR 1.2, 95% CI 0.5-3.4.
Although several reported adverse events in childhood were observed to be associated with chronic widespread pain in adulthood, only reports of hospitalizations were significantly associated. Validation of self-reported exposures suggests that there was differential recall of past events among those with and without pain, and this differential recall explained the association between hospitalizations and current chronic pain. Such differential recall may explain other observations of an association between reports of adverse childhood events and chronic pain in adulthood.
基于临床的研究表明,童年时期的不良事件可能使人在成年后易患慢性疼痛。这些研究是在经过高度筛选的人群中进行的,尚不清楚这些关系在普通人群中是否成立,以及疼痛患者中童年不良事件发生率的增加在多大程度上是差异报告造成的假象。我们检验了以下假设:慢性广泛性疼痛与童年不良经历的报告有关,以及任何观察到的关系是否可以用差异回忆来解释。
进行了一项基于人群的横断面筛查调查。受试者完成了一份问卷,其中包括对疼痛和心理状态的评估。总共随机选择了296名表现出心理困扰的受试者,并进行了详细访谈,其中包括对14种童年不良经历的评估。还检查了这些受试者与童年相关的医疗记录。
自我报告的童年不良经历的患病率在目前患有慢性广泛性疼痛的成年受试者中最高。家庭成员患病、父母离世、手术和虐待都与患慢性广泛性疼痛的几率增加有关,但不显著,与未经历这些情况的人相比。然而,唯一具有统计学意义的关联是与童年住院情况有关。根据医疗记录信息,先前指出的住院(比值比5.1,95%置信区间2.0 - 13.0)和手术(比值比3.0,95%置信区间1.2 - 7.2)与疼痛之间的关联部分可由有疼痛和无疼痛受试者之间的差异回忆来解释:住院,比值比2.2,95%置信区间0.9 - 5.5;手术,比值比1.2,95%置信区间0.5 - 3.4。
虽然观察到童年时期的一些报告不良事件与成年后的慢性广泛性疼痛有关,但只有住院报告与之有显著关联。对自我报告暴露情况的验证表明,有疼痛和无疼痛的人对过去事件的回忆存在差异,这种差异回忆解释了住院与当前慢性疼痛之间的关联。这种差异回忆可能解释了其他关于童年不良事件报告与成年慢性疼痛之间关联的观察结果。