Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, USA.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2011 Jan;92(1):146-60. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2010.09.021.
To systematically review the research findings regarding the associations between psychosocial factors and adjustment to chronic pain in persons with physical disabilities.
A key word literature search was conducted using articles listed in PubMed, PsychInfo, and CINAHL up to March 2010, and manual searches were made of all retrieved articles to identify published articles that met the review inclusion criteria.
To be included in the review, articles needed to (1) be written in English, (2) include adults with a physical disability who report having pain, (3) include at least 1 measure of a psychosocial predictor domain, (4) include at least 1 criterion measure of pain or patient functioning, and (5) report the results of associations between the psychosocial factors and criterion measures used in the study. Twenty-nine studies met the inclusion criteria.
Three reviewers tabulated study details and findings.
The disability groups studied included spinal cord injury (SCI), acquired amputation, cerebral palsy (CP), multiple sclerosis (MS), and muscular dystrophy (MD). Psychosocial factors were shown to be significantly associated with pain and dysfunction in all disability groups. The psychosocial factors most closely associated with pain and dysfunction across the samples included (1) catastrophizing cognitions; (2) task persistence, guarding, and resting coping responses; and (3) perceived social support and solicitous responding social factors. Pain-related beliefs were more strongly associated with pain and dysfunction in the SCI, CP, MS, and MD groups than in the acquired amputation group.
The findings support the importance of psychosocial factors as significant predictors of pain and functioning in persons with physical disabilities. Clinical trials to test the efficacy of psychosocial treatments for pain and dysfunction are warranted, as are studies to determine whether psychosocial factors have a causal influence on pain and adjustment in these populations.
系统回顾心理社会因素与身体残疾者慢性疼痛适应相关的研究结果。
使用 PubMed、PsychInfo 和 CINAHL 中列出的文章进行了关键词文献检索,检索截至 2010 年 3 月,并对所有检索到的文章进行了手工检索,以确定符合综述纳入标准的已发表文章。
为了纳入综述,文章需要(1)用英文书写,(2)包括报告有疼痛的身体残疾成年人,(3)至少包括 1 个心理社会预测因素域的测量,(4)至少包括 1 个疼痛或患者功能的标准测量,以及(5)报告研究中心理社会因素与标准测量之间关联的结果。29 项研究符合纳入标准。
3 位审稿人对研究细节和结果进行制表。
研究的残疾组包括脊髓损伤(SCI)、后天性截肢、脑瘫(CP)、多发性硬化症(MS)和肌肉萎缩症(MD)。心理社会因素与所有残疾组的疼痛和功能障碍显著相关。在所有样本中与疼痛和功能障碍最密切相关的心理社会因素包括(1)灾难化认知;(2)任务坚持、保护和休息应对反应;以及(3)感知社会支持和体贴响应社会因素。与疼痛相关的信念与 SCI、CP、MS 和 MD 组的疼痛和功能障碍的相关性强于后天性截肢组。
研究结果支持心理社会因素作为身体残疾者疼痛和功能的重要预测因素的重要性。需要进行临床试验以测试心理社会治疗对疼痛和功能障碍的疗效,也需要研究以确定心理社会因素是否对这些人群的疼痛和适应有因果影响。