Montgomery Guy H, Bovbjerg Dana H
Integrative Behavioral Medicine Program and Biobehavioral Medicine Program, Ruttenberg Cancer Center, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029-6574, USA.
Health Psychol. 2004 Jul;23(4):381-7. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.23.4.381.
Prior to scheduled surgery, patients frequently experience particularly high levels of distress and expect a variety of postsurgery symptoms. Surgery patients who confront breast cancer are no exception. It has been suggested that such presurgery distress and response expectancies are predictive of postsurgery outcomes. To test the contribution of presurgery distress and expectancies to common postsurgery symptom outcomes (pain, nausea, fatigue, and discomfort), 63 female patients undergoing breast cancer surgery were recruited to a prospective study. Results indicated that presurgery distress uniquely contributed to patients' postsurgery nausea, fatigue, and discomfort; specific expectancies uniquely contributed to pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, and fatigue (ps < .05). Consistent with expectancy theory, associations between response expectancies and postsurgery outcomes were not due to presurgery distress.
在预定手术前,患者常常会经历特别高程度的痛苦,并预期会出现各种术后症状。面临乳腺癌手术的患者也不例外。有人提出,这种术前痛苦和反应预期可预测术后结果。为了检验术前痛苦和预期对常见术后症状结果(疼痛、恶心、疲劳和不适)的影响,招募了63名接受乳腺癌手术的女性患者进行一项前瞻性研究。结果表明,术前痛苦对患者术后恶心、疲劳和不适有独特的影响;特定预期对疼痛强度、疼痛不适感和疲劳有独特的影响(p值<0.05)。与预期理论一致,反应预期与术后结果之间的关联并非由术前痛苦所致。