Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; VA Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness, Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Durham, North Carolina.
Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; VA Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness, Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Durham, North Carolina.
Womens Health Issues. 2019 Jun 25;29 Suppl 1:S24-S31. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2019.04.015.
Chronic pain conditions are common among both male and female Iraq/Afghanistan-era veterans and can have substantial negative impacts on quality of life and function. Although in general women tend to report higher levels of pain intensity than men, findings remain mixed on whether gender differences in pain exist in Iraq/Afghanistan-era veterans. Additionally, the relationships between functional impairment, pain intensity, and gender remain unknown.
This project examined gender differences in pain intensity and pain interference in 875 male and female Iraq/Afghanistan-era veterans. Nonparametric Wilcoxon rank-tests examined gender differences in pain scores. Multivariable generalized linear regression modeling was used to evaluate the magnitude of pain intensity and interference across levels of chronicity and gender, and to evaluate the role of chronicity in gender effects in measures of pain and function.
Pain intensity and interference scores were significantly greater among both male and female veterans reporting chronic pain relative to acute pain. Women veterans endorsed higher levels of pain intensity and pain interference compared with men. Results derived from multivariable analyses implicated pain intensity as a factor underlying gender differences in functional impairment among chronic pain sufferers, indicating that gender differences in functional measures were eliminated after controlling statistically for pain intensity.
Results demonstrate that the effects of functional impairment are impacted by pain intensity, and not by gender.
慢性疼痛在男性和女性伊拉克/阿富汗时代的退伍军人中都很常见,会对生活质量和功能产生重大负面影响。尽管一般来说,女性报告的疼痛强度往往高于男性,但在伊拉克/阿富汗时代的退伍军人中是否存在性别差异的疼痛仍存在争议。此外,功能障碍、疼痛强度和性别的关系仍不清楚。
本项目研究了 875 名男性和女性伊拉克/阿富汗时代退伍军人的疼痛强度和疼痛干扰的性别差异。非参数 Wilcoxon 秩检验检查了疼痛评分的性别差异。多变量广义线性回归模型用于评估慢性疼痛和性别水平上的疼痛强度和干扰的程度,并评估慢性疼痛在疼痛和功能测量中的性别效应中的作用。
与急性疼痛相比,报告慢性疼痛的男性和女性退伍军人的疼痛强度和干扰评分均显著更高。与男性相比,女性退伍军人的疼痛强度和疼痛干扰程度更高。多变量分析的结果表明,疼痛强度是慢性疼痛患者功能障碍性别差异的一个因素,表明在统计学上控制疼痛强度后,功能测量中的性别差异就消除了。
结果表明,功能障碍的影响受疼痛强度的影响,而不受性别影响。