LeResche Linda, Dworkin Samuel F, Wilson Leanne, Ehrlich Kelly J
Department of Oral Medicine (SC-63), University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (RP-10), University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
Pain. 1992 Dec;51(3):289-295. doi: 10.1016/0304-3959(92)90212-T.
This study investigated how specific expressive behaviors (verbal report of pain level and the frequency of emitting specific non-verbal facial expressions of pain) may change over the course of a chronic pain condition. Based on the concept of chronic pain behaviors, we hypothesized that both verbal and non-verbal behavior would increase with duration of pain. Thirty-six women with chronic temporomandibular disorder (TMD) pain (duration over 6 months) were compared with 35 recent onset cases (first episode, duration < or = 2 months). Subjects completed questionnaires assessing depression, anxiety, somatization, daily hassles and pain coping strategies. They were videotaped during a resting baseline and 2 painful conditions: experimental cold pressor pain and the clinically relevant pain of palpation of the masticatory muscles and temporomandibular joint; tapes were coded for facial expression using the Facial Action Coding System. Visual analog scale (VAS) ratings of the aversiveness and intensity of ongoing TMD pain were collected at baseline, and similar ratings of cold pressor and clinical examination pain were gathered after the painful stimulus. Recent onset and chronic cases did not differ on self-report measures of anxiety, depression, somatization or daily stress. Coping strategies were also similar, although chronic cases showed a greater tendency to catastrophize. Self-report measures of ambient facial pain, as well as the pain of clinical examination and cold pressor stimulation, revealed no significant differences between the 2 groups. In contrast, rates of pain facial expression were significantly higher for chronic cases under all conditions of the experiment, including baseline.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
本研究调查了特定的表达行为(疼痛程度的言语报告以及发出特定疼痛非言语面部表情的频率)在慢性疼痛状况过程中可能如何变化。基于慢性疼痛行为的概念,我们假设言语和非言语行为都会随着疼痛持续时间的增加而增加。将36名患有慢性颞下颌关节紊乱症(TMD)疼痛(病程超过6个月)的女性与35名近期发病病例(首次发作,病程≤2个月)进行比较。受试者完成了评估抑郁、焦虑、躯体化、日常困扰和疼痛应对策略的问卷。在静息基线和两种疼痛状况下对他们进行录像:实验性冷压痛和咀嚼肌及颞下颌关节触诊的临床相关疼痛;使用面部动作编码系统对面部表情进行编码。在基线时收集正在进行的TMD疼痛的厌恶感和强度的视觉模拟量表(VAS)评分,并在疼痛刺激后收集冷压痛和临床检查疼痛的类似评分。近期发病病例和慢性病例在焦虑、抑郁、躯体化或日常压力的自我报告测量方面没有差异。应对策略也相似,尽管慢性病例表现出更大的灾难化倾向。两组在周围面部疼痛的自我报告测量以及临床检查和冷压痛刺激的疼痛方面均无显著差异。相比之下,在实验的所有条件下,包括基线时,慢性病例的疼痛面部表情发生率显著更高。(摘要截短至250字)