Munk Alice, Reme Silje Endresen, Jacobsen Henrik Børsting
The Mind-Body Lab, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Pain Management and Research, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Front Psychol. 2021 Mar 23;12:630422. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.630422. eCollection 2021.
Chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP) represents a highly prevalent and significant clinical problem. Both major and minor surgeries entail risks of developing CPSP, and cancer-related surgery is no exception. As an example, more than 40% of women undergoing breast cancer surgery struggle with CPSP years after surgery. While we do not fully understand the pathophysiology of CPSP, we know it is multifaceted with biological, social, and psychological factors contributing. The aim of this review is to advocate for the role of response outcome expectancies in the development of CPSP following breast cancer surgery. We propose the Cognitive Activation Theory of Stress (CATS) as an applicable theoretical framework detailing the potential role of cortisol regulation, inflammation, and inflammatory-induced sickness behavior in CPSP. Drawing on learning theory and activation theory, CATS offers psychobiological explanations for the relationship between stress and health, where acquired expectancies are crucial in determining the stress response and health outcomes. Based on existing knowledge about risk factors for CPSP, and in line with the CATS position, we propose the SURGEry outcome expectancy (SURGE) model of CPSP. According to SURGE, expectancies impact stress physiology, inflammation, and fear-based learning influencing the development and persistence of CPSP. SURGE further proposes that generalized response outcome expectancies drive adaptive or maladaptive stress responses in the time around surgery, where coping dampens the stress response, while helplessness and hopelessness sustains it. A sustained stress response may contribute to central sensitization, alterations in functional brain networks and excessive fear-based learning. This sets the stage for a prolonged state of inflammatory-induced sickness behavior - potentially driving and maintaining CPSP. Finally, as psychological factors are modifiable, robust and potent predictors of CPSP, we suggest hypnosis as an effective intervention strategy targeting response outcome expectancies. We here argue that presurgical clinical hypnosis has the potential of preventing CPSP in women with breast cancer.
慢性术后疼痛(CPSP)是一个非常普遍且严重的临床问题。无论是大手术还是小手术都有发生CPSP的风险,癌症相关手术也不例外。例如,超过40%接受乳腺癌手术的女性在术后数年都饱受CPSP的困扰。虽然我们尚未完全了解CPSP的病理生理学,但我们知道它是多方面的,涉及生物、社会和心理因素。本综述的目的是倡导反应结果预期在乳腺癌手术后CPSP发生过程中的作用。我们提出应激的认知激活理论(CATS)作为一个适用的理论框架,详细阐述皮质醇调节、炎症和炎症诱导的疾病行为在CPSP中的潜在作用。借鉴学习理论和激活理论,CATS为压力与健康之间的关系提供了心理生物学解释,其中习得的预期在决定应激反应和健康结果方面至关重要。基于对CPSP危险因素的现有认识,并与CATS的观点一致,我们提出了CPSP的手术结果预期(SURGE)模型。根据SURGE模型,预期会影响应激生理学、炎症和基于恐惧的学习,从而影响CPSP的发生和持续。SURGE模型进一步提出,一般化的反应结果预期在手术前后驱动适应性或适应不良的应激反应,其中应对可减轻应激反应,而无助和绝望则会维持应激反应。持续的应激反应可能导致中枢敏化、功能性脑网络改变以及过度的基于恐惧的学习。这为炎症诱导的疾病行为的长期状态奠定了基础——可能驱动并维持CPSP。最后,由于心理因素是CPSP的可调节、强大且有效的预测因素,我们建议将催眠作为一种针对反应结果预期的有效干预策略。我们在此认为,术前临床催眠有预防乳腺癌女性发生CPSP的潜力。