Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Psychology, Loyola University Chicago, 1032 W. Sheridan Road, Chicago, IL, 60660, USA.
Arch Womens Ment Health. 2018 Oct;21(5):533-541. doi: 10.1007/s00737-018-0823-4. Epub 2018 Mar 10.
Somatic symptoms are a robust, transdiagnostic risk factor for pain conditions. However, the extent to which somatic symptoms contribute to the manifestation of the women's pain syndromes, such as dysmenorrhea and noncyclic pelvic pain (NCPP), is unclear due to high rates of co-occurrence. Therefore, the present study investigated the primary hypothesis that somatic symptoms would be elevated in NCPP and distinctly influence the relationship between dysmenorrhea and co-occurring NCPP. A secondary analysis was performed on cross-sectional questionnaire data from 1012 nonpregnant reproductive-aged women. Eligible analyzed participants (n = 834) were categorized into four groups: healthy, dysmenorrhea, NCPP, and NCPP with co-occurring dysmenorrhea (NCPP+dysmenorrhea). A parallel mediation analysis was run to evaluate the primary hypothesis that somatic symptoms are the primary factor associated with increased NCPP accounting for dysmenorrhea. The NCPP+dysmenorrhea group had higher somatic, anxiety, and depression symptom T-scores (respectively 61, 61, 60) compared to the healthy controls (46, 51, 51; p's < .001) and the dysmenorrhea group (50, 53, 54; p's < .001). The pain and psychological symptoms were significantly correlated across the entire sample (r's = .29, - .64, p's < .01). Results from parallel mediation analysis showed that somatic symptoms were distinctly associated with NCPP+dysmenorrhea. Women with NCPP+dysmenorrhea have increased psychological and somatic symptoms compared to women with dysmenorrhea alone. Given that NCPP often co-occurs with dysmenorrhea, failure to account for comorbidity in previous studies has likely led to an overestimation of psychological symptoms in dysmenorrhea. Future studies should evaluate whether somatic sensitivity is a modifiable risk factor for NCPP.
躯体症状是疼痛疾病的一种强有力的、跨诊断的风险因素。然而,由于躯体症状与非周期性盆腔疼痛(NCPP)等女性疼痛综合征的发生高度相关,因此,躯体症状在多大程度上导致了这些疼痛综合征的表现尚不清楚。因此,本研究提出了一个主要假设,即躯体症状在 NCPP 中会升高,并明显影响痛经与同时发生的 NCPP 之间的关系。对 1012 名非妊娠育龄妇女的横断面问卷调查数据进行了二次分析。符合分析条件的参与者(n=834)分为四组:健康组、痛经组、NCPP 组和同时伴有痛经的 NCPP 组(NCPP+痛经组)。进行了平行中介分析,以评估躯体症状是与增加的 NCPP 相关的主要因素,从而解释痛经的主要假设。与健康对照组(46、51、51;p 值均<.001)和痛经组(50、53、54;p 值均<.001)相比,NCPP+痛经组的躯体、焦虑和抑郁症状 T 评分更高(分别为 61、61、60)。整个样本的疼痛和心理症状显著相关(r 值分别为.29、-0.64,p 值均<.01)。平行中介分析的结果表明,躯体症状与 NCPP+痛经显著相关。与仅痛经的女性相比,同时患有 NCPP 和痛经的女性具有更高的心理和躯体症状。由于 NCPP 常与痛经同时发生,如果在以前的研究中没有考虑到共病,可能会导致对痛经患者心理症状的高估。未来的研究应该评估躯体敏感性是否是 NCPP 的一个可改变的风险因素。