Courtemanche Andrea B, Black William R, Reese R Matthew
Andrea B. Courtemanche, University of Saint Joseph, West Hartford, CT;
William R. Black, University of Missouri - Kansas City; and.
Am J Intellect Dev Disabil. 2016 May;121(3):194-203. doi: 10.1352/1944-7558-121.3.194.
Research has suggested that individuals who engage in self-injurious behavior may have enhanced expressions of pain, which contradicts previous assertions of blunted pain sensitivity in this population. The purpose of this study was to measure expressions of pain among young children being evaluated for autism and other neurodevelopmental disabilities. The frequency of pain-related behaviors was assessed during everyday routines using the Non-Communicating Children's Pain Checklist (NCCPC-R) for 51 children. Significant group differences between children with and without self-injury were found for the NCCPC-R total scores. The frequency and severity of self-injury, aggression, and stereotypy were also highly correlated with the total scores on the NCCPC-R. These results continue to support that individuals with self-injury may have enhanced expressions of pain.
研究表明,进行自我伤害行为的个体可能有增强的疼痛表现,这与之前关于该人群疼痛敏感性降低的论断相矛盾。本研究的目的是测量接受自闭症和其他神经发育障碍评估的幼儿的疼痛表现。使用《非言语儿童疼痛检查表(修订版)》(NCCPC-R),对51名儿童在日常活动中与疼痛相关行为的频率进行了评估。在NCCPC-R总分上,发现有自我伤害行为和无自我伤害行为的儿童之间存在显著的组间差异。自我伤害、攻击行为和刻板行为的频率及严重程度也与NCCPC-R总分高度相关。这些结果继续支持自我伤害个体可能有增强的疼痛表现这一观点。