Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Child Health Evaluative Sciences, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Pain. 2017 Oct;158(10):1886-1892. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000976.
Child and parent pain catastrophizing are reported preoperative risk factors for children's acute and persistent postsurgical pain. This study examined dyadic relations between child and parent pain catastrophizing and child and parent ratings of child pain prior to (M = 4.01 days; "baseline") and following surgery (M = 6.5 weeks; "acute follow-up"), as well changes in pain catastrophizing during this time in 167 youth (86% female; Mage = 14.55 years) undergoing spinal fusion surgery and 1 parent (89% mothers). Actor-partner interdependence models assessed cross-sectional and longitudinal intra- and interpersonal effects. Cross-sectionally, child pain catastrophizing was positively associated with child pain at baseline and acute follow-up (actor effects: βbaseline = 0.288 and βfollow-up = 0.262; P < 0.01), and parents' ratings of child pain at baseline (partner effect: βbaseline = 0.212; P < 0.01). Parent pain catastrophizing was not cross-sectionally associated with ratings of child pain. Longitudinally, higher pain catastrophizing at baseline predicted higher pain catastrophizing at acute follow-up for children (actor effect: β = 0.337; P < 0.01) and parents (actor effect: β = 0.579; P < 0.01) with a significantly smaller effect for children (respondent × actor interaction: β = 0.121; P < 0.05). No longitudinal partner effects for catastrophizing were observed. Baseline child and parent pain catastrophizing did not predict child pain at acute follow-up. In conclusion, child, not parent, pain catastrophizing was associated with children's pre- and postsurgical pain, and showed significantly less stability over time. There is a need to better understand contributors to the stability or changeability of pain catastrophizing, the prospective relation of catastrophizing to pain, and contexts in which child vs parent pain catastrophizing is most influential for pediatric postsurgical pain.
儿童和父母的疼痛灾难化被报道为儿童急性和持续性术后疼痛的术前风险因素。本研究在 167 名接受脊柱融合手术的青少年(86%为女性;平均年龄为 14.55 岁)及其 1 名家长(89%为母亲)中,检验了儿童和父母疼痛灾难化在术前(M=4.01 天;“基线”)和术后(M=6.5 周;“急性随访”)的关系,以及在此期间疼痛灾难化的变化。采用演员-伙伴相互依存模型评估了横向和纵向的个体内和人际间的影响。横向研究中,儿童的疼痛灾难化与基线和急性随访时的儿童疼痛呈正相关(演员效应:β基线=0.288 和β随访=0.262;P<0.01),与父母基线时对儿童疼痛的评估也呈正相关(伙伴效应:β基线=0.212;P<0.01)。父母的疼痛灾难化与儿童疼痛的评估在横向上没有关联。纵向研究中,基线时较高的疼痛灾难化预测了儿童(演员效应:β=0.337;P<0.01)和父母(演员效应:β=0.579;P<0.01)在急性随访时更高的疼痛灾难化,而对儿童的影响明显较小(应答者×演员交互作用:β=0.121;P<0.05)。未观察到灾难化的纵向伙伴效应。基线时儿童和父母的疼痛灾难化不能预测急性随访时的儿童疼痛。总之,儿童而不是父母的疼痛灾难化与儿童的术前和术后疼痛有关,且随着时间的推移,其稳定性显著降低。需要更好地理解疼痛灾难化的稳定性或可变性的影响因素、灾难化与疼痛的前瞻性关系,以及在哪些情况下儿童或父母的疼痛灾难化对儿科术后疼痛的影响最大。