Psychology Department, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701, USA.
Clin Neuropsychol. 2012;26(7):1128-41. doi: 10.1080/13854046.2012.713121. Epub 2012 Aug 28.
Pain-related fear is related to self-reported avoidance of physical activities that might induce pain (kinesiophobia), as well as diminished physical performance in non-headache chronic pain. A related concept, "cogniphobia," has been proposed by others, which suggests that individuals high in headache-related fear will avoid cognitive tasks (by putting forth less effort) in an attempt to minimize the risk of bringing on or exacerbating existing headache symptoms. In the present study we explored the psychological, cognitive, and behavioral correlates of cogniphobia in 74 young adults with frequent headaches. Latent variable analysis of the cogniphobia measure revealed a component focused on fear of headache pain and avoidance of behaviors that would induce pain, which was related to sustained attention performance, performance on a symptom validity measure, and pressure pain threshold on the head, consistent with existing kinesiophobia research in non-headache pain. Results have implications for neuropsychological assessment in headache; pain-related fear may be related to diminished effort on neuropsychological tasks.
疼痛相关恐惧与自我报告的避免可能引起疼痛的身体活动(运动恐惧症)有关,也与非头痛慢性疼痛中的身体机能下降有关。其他人提出了一个相关概念,“认知恐惧症”,即患有与头痛相关的恐惧的个体将避免认知任务(通过减少努力),以尽量减少引发或加重现有头痛症状的风险。在本研究中,我们在 74 名患有频繁头痛的年轻人中探讨了认知恐惧症的心理、认知和行为相关性。认知恐惧症测量的潜在变量分析显示,一个专注于头痛疼痛恐惧和避免会引起疼痛的行为的成分与持续注意力表现、症状有效性测量上的表现以及头部的压痛阈值有关,这与非头痛疼痛中的运动恐惧症研究一致。研究结果对头痛的神经心理学评估具有启示意义;与疼痛相关的恐惧可能与神经心理学任务上的努力减少有关。