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疼痛灾难化对美国原住民疼痛内抑制和脊髓伤害感受的影响:来自俄克拉荷马州美国原住民疼痛风险研究的结果。

The Effect of Pain Catastrophizing on Endogenous Inhibition of Pain and Spinal Nociception in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, The University of Tulsa, Tulsa, OK, USA.

Department of Pediatrics, Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA.

出版信息

Ann Behav Med. 2020 Aug 8;54(8):575-594. doi: 10.1093/abm/kaaa004.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) is a task that involves measuring pain in response to a test stimulus before and during a painful conditioning stimulus (CS). The CS pain typically inhibits pain elicited by the test stimulus; thus, this task is used to assess endogenous pain inhibition. Moreover, less efficient CPM-related inhibition is associated with chronic pain risk. Pain catastrophizing is a cognitive-emotional process associated with negative pain sequelae, and some studies have found that catastrophizing reduces CPM efficiency.

PURPOSE

The current study examined the relationship between catastrophizing (dispositional and situation specific) and CPM-related inhibition of pain and the nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR; a marker of spinal nociception) to determine whether the catastrophizing-CPM relationship might contribute to the higher risk of chronic pain in Native Americans (NAs).

METHODS

CPM of pain and NFR was assessed in 124 NAs and 129 non-Hispanic Whites. Dispositional catastrophizing was assessed at the beginning of the test day, whereas situation-specific catastrophizing was assessed in response to the CS, as well as painful electric stimuli.

RESULTS

Situation-specific, but not dispositional, catastrophizing led to less NFR inhibition but more pain inhibition. These effects were not moderated by race, but mediation analyses found that: (a) the NA race was associated with greater situation-specific catastrophizing, which led to less NFR inhibition and more pain inhibition, and (b) situation-specific catastrophizing was associated with greater CS pain, which led to more pain inhibition.

CONCLUSIONS

Catastrophizing may contribute to NA pain risk by disrupting descending inhibition.

摘要

背景

条件性疼痛调制(CPM)是一种任务,涉及在疼痛条件刺激(CS)之前和期间测量对测试刺激的疼痛。CS 疼痛通常会抑制测试刺激引起的疼痛;因此,该任务用于评估内源性疼痛抑制。此外,与慢性疼痛风险相关的 CPM 相关抑制效率较低。疼痛灾难化是一种与负面疼痛后果相关的认知-情绪过程,一些研究发现灾难化会降低 CPM 效率。

目的

本研究检查了灾难化(特质和情境特定)与 CPM 相关的疼痛抑制和伤害性屈肌反射(NFR;脊髓伤害性的标志物)之间的关系,以确定灾难化-CPM 关系是否可能导致美洲原住民(NAs)慢性疼痛的风险更高。

方法

在 124 名 NAs 和 129 名非西班牙裔白种人中评估了 CPM 的疼痛和 NFR。特质灾难化在测试日开始时进行评估,而情境特定灾难化则在 CS 以及疼痛电刺激时进行评估。

结果

情境特定但不是特质的灾难化导致 NFR 抑制减少但疼痛抑制增加。这些影响不受种族影响,但中介分析发现:(a)NA 种族与更大的情境特定灾难化相关,这导致 NFR 抑制减少和疼痛抑制增加,以及(b)情境特定灾难化与更大的 CS 疼痛相关,这导致更多的疼痛抑制。

结论

灾难化可能通过破坏下行抑制来导致 NA 疼痛风险。

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