Moore David J, Law Anna S
Liverpool John Moores University, UK; Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour, Liverpool John Moores University, UK.
Liverpool John Moores University, UK; Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour, Liverpool John Moores University, UK.
Scand J Pain. 2017 Jul;16:29-35. doi: 10.1016/j.sjpain.2017.02.006. Epub 2017 Mar 21.
Pain is known to have a disruptive effect on cognitive performance, but prior studies have used highly constrained laboratory tasks that lack ecological validity. In everyday life people are required to complete more complex sets of tasks, prioritising task completion and recalling lists of tasks which need to be completed, and these tasks continue to be attempted during episodes or states of pain. The present study therefore examined the impact of thermal induced pain on a simulated errand task.
Fifty-five healthy adults (36 female) performed the Edinburgh Virtual Errands Task (EVET) either during a painful thermal sensation or with no concurrent pain. Participants also completed the Experience of Cognitive Intrusion of Pain (ECIP) questionnaire to measure their self-reported cognitive impact of pain in general life.
Participants who completed the EVET task in pain and who self-reported high intrusion of pain made significantly more errors than those who reported lower intrusion on the ECIP.
Findings here support the growing literature that suggests that pain has a significant impact on cognitive performance. Furthermore, these findings support the developing literature suggesting that this relationship is complex when considering real world cognition, and that self-report on the ECIP relates well to performance on a task designed to reflect the complexities of everyday living.
If extrapolated to chronic pain populations, these data suggest that pain during complex multitasking performance may have a significant impact on the number of errors made. For people highly vulnerable to cognitive intrusion by pain, this may result in errors such as selecting the wrong location or item to perform tasks, or forgetting to perform these tasks at the correct time. If these findings are shown to extend to chronic pain populations then occupational support to manage complex task performance, using for example diaries/electronic reminders, may help to improve everyday abilities.
已知疼痛会对认知表现产生干扰作用,但先前的研究使用的是高度受限且缺乏生态效度的实验室任务。在日常生活中,人们需要完成更复杂的任务集,优先完成任务并回忆需要完成的任务清单,而且这些任务在疼痛发作或处于疼痛状态时仍会继续尝试。因此,本研究考察了热诱导疼痛对模拟差事任务的影响。
55名健康成年人(36名女性)在有热痛觉或无同时疼痛的情况下执行爱丁堡虚拟差事任务(EVET)。参与者还完成了疼痛认知侵入体验(ECIP)问卷,以测量他们在日常生活中自我报告的疼痛对认知的影响。
在疼痛状态下完成EVET任务且自我报告疼痛侵入程度高的参与者比那些在ECIP上报告侵入程度低的参与者犯的错误明显更多。
此处的研究结果支持了越来越多的文献观点,即疼痛对认知表现有显著影响。此外,这些结果支持了新出现的文献观点,即在考虑现实世界认知时,这种关系很复杂,而且ECIP上的自我报告与旨在反映日常生活复杂性的任务表现密切相关。
如果将这些数据外推至慢性疼痛人群,这表明在复杂的多任务执行过程中的疼痛可能会对犯错数量产生重大影响。对于极易受到疼痛认知侵入影响的人来说,这可能会导致诸如选择错误的地点或物品来执行任务,或忘记在正确时间执行这些任务等错误。如果这些结果被证明也适用于慢性疼痛人群,那么通过使用日记/电子提醒等方式来管理复杂任务表现的职业支持可能有助于提高日常能力。