Department of Neuroscience, Federico II University of Naples, Via Pansini 5, Naples, Italy.
Headache. 2012 Jun;52(6):1019-25. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4610.2012.02171.x. Epub 2012 May 18.
Burning mouth syndrome (BMS) is an idiopathic and chronic pain condition for which patients may experience high levels of pain, anxiety, and depression. So far, it has not yet been well investigated whether specific psychiatric features (anxious traits, personality disorder, or somatization) may play a role in the BMS pathogenesis or whether some BMS symptoms, or BMS itself, may cause secondary psychiatric symptoms.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between pain, depression, and anxiety in BMS and healthy patients in order to hypothesize a possible underlying pathogenetic model.
Fifty-three patients with BMS and 51 healthy volunteers matched for sex and age were enrolled. All patients underwent a physical examination, laboratory screening tests, and psychiatric assessment with the following instruments: Visual Analog Scale, the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form Y 1-2 (STAI Y1-Y2), and the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R).
BMS patients and healthy volunteers showed a statistically significant difference in psychiatric features: Regression analysis showed that pain is affected by depression (R = 0.373; R(2) corrected = 0.123; F = 8.563; P < .005), and depression is affected by anxiety (R = 0.512; R(2) corrected = 0.248; F = 18.519; P < .001). BMS patients have statistically significant higher scores of anxiety (STAI Y1, P = .026 and STAI Y2, P = .046) and depression (P < .001), and higher SCL-90-R scores on somatization (P = .036) and hostility dimensions (P = .028) than the control group.
We may hypothesize that anxiety could determine a secondary demoralization in BMS patients (depression) and depressive symptoms could contribute to pain, accordingly. Therefore, pain could be a somatic feature of depression. Our findings provide an example of a possible pathogenetic model for BMS.
灼口综合征(BMS)是一种特发性的慢性疼痛疾病,患者可能会经历高度的疼痛、焦虑和抑郁。到目前为止,还没有很好地研究特定的精神特征(焦虑特征、人格障碍或躯体化)是否可能在 BMS 发病机制中发挥作用,或者一些 BMS 症状或 BMS 本身是否会导致继发性精神症状。
本研究旨在评估 BMS 患者与健康患者之间疼痛、抑郁和焦虑之间的关系,以便提出可能的潜在发病机制模型。
纳入 53 名 BMS 患者和 51 名年龄和性别匹配的健康志愿者。所有患者均接受体格检查、实验室筛查试验和精神病学评估,使用以下工具:视觉模拟量表、汉密尔顿抑郁量表、状态-特质焦虑量表 Y1-2(STAI Y1-Y2)和症状清单 90 修订版(SCL-90-R)。
BMS 患者和健康志愿者在精神特征上存在统计学显著差异:回归分析表明疼痛受抑郁影响(R=0.373;R2 校正=0.123;F=8.563;P<0.005),抑郁受焦虑影响(R=0.512;R2 校正=0.248;F=18.519;P<0.001)。BMS 患者的焦虑评分(STAI Y1,P=0.026 和 STAI Y2,P=0.046)和抑郁评分(P<0.001)以及躯体化(P=0.036)和敌对维度(P=0.028)的 SCL-90-R 评分均具有统计学显著意义高于对照组。
我们可以假设焦虑可能导致 BMS 患者的继发性情绪低落(抑郁),而抑郁症状可能导致疼痛,因此,疼痛可能是抑郁的躯体表现。我们的发现为 BMS 的可能发病机制模型提供了一个示例。