Brown Donnamay, Schenk Sabrina, Genent Dunja, Zernikow Boris, Wager Julia
German Paediatric Pain Centre, Children's and Adolescents' Hospital, Witten/Herdecke University, Datteln, Germany.
Department of Children's Pain Therapy and Paediatric Palliative Care, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health, Witten/Herdecke University, Germany.
Pain Rep. 2021 Apr 5;6(1):e920. doi: 10.1097/PR9.0000000000000920. eCollection 2021.
Much of the adult chronic pain literature addresses pain in typical pain cohorts of middle-aged to older individuals. To date, little research has focused on chronic pain in younger adults, who likely have a completely different pain experience. This scoping review aimed to address this gap by describing the emerging adult (18-29 years) chronic pain experience regarding prevalence, associated factors, outcomes, and pain management. Searches of primary electronic databases including PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, and CINAHL were performed on February 26, 2020, restricting the publication date from database inception to December 31, 2019. The search strategy, conducted in English, covered search term combinations of "chronic pain" and "young adults." A total of 6,612 records were considered-3,141 after removing duplicates. These records were screened by title and abstract; 871 through full-text screening. Of these, 78 articles covered the topic of emerging adults with chronic pain. Collectively, results indicated that between 5% and 30% of emerging adults experience chronic pain, depending on the sample and exact chronic pain definition. The most consistent associated factors were female sex, familial chronic pain, and previous experiences of chronic pain in childhood. Anxiety, depression, and sleep issues appeared associated both before and after the onset of chronic pain. Outcomes of pain included interruptions to study and work, poorer physical functioning, and pain-related interference to socializing. We observed that few pain treatments have been tested specifically in this cohort. A greater ongoing focus on chronic pain in emerging adults is required to improve long-lasting outcomes.
许多关于成人慢性疼痛的文献都聚焦于中年至老年个体的典型疼痛群体中的疼痛情况。迄今为止,很少有研究关注年轻成年人的慢性疼痛,而他们可能有着截然不同的疼痛体验。本综述旨在通过描述新兴成年人(18至29岁)在慢性疼痛患病率、相关因素、结局及疼痛管理方面的情况来填补这一空白。2020年2月26日对包括PubMed、Embase、PsycINFO和CINAHL在内的主要电子数据库进行了检索,将出版日期限制在从数据库建立到2019年12月31日。以英文进行的检索策略涵盖了“慢性疼痛”和“年轻成年人”的搜索词组合。共筛选出6612条记录,去除重复后为3141条。这些记录先通过标题和摘要进行筛选,再通过全文筛选出871条。其中,78篇文章涉及新兴成年人慢性疼痛这一主题。总体而言,结果表明,根据样本和慢性疼痛的确切定义,5%至30%的新兴成年人经历慢性疼痛。最一致的相关因素是女性、家族性慢性疼痛以及童年时期的慢性疼痛经历。焦虑、抑郁和睡眠问题在慢性疼痛发作前后似乎都与之相关。疼痛的结局包括学习和工作中断、身体功能较差以及疼痛对社交的干扰。我们观察到,很少有疼痛治疗方法在这一群体中进行过专门测试。需要更加持续地关注新兴成年人的慢性疼痛,以改善长期结局。