Kim ShinYe, Lee Jaehoon, Boone Dianna
Department of Psychological Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA.
Department of Educational Psychology, Leadership, and Counseling, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA.
J Pain Res. 2022 Apr 15;15:1107-1121. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S340382. eCollection 2022.
Research indicates a complex nexus between chronic pain, depression, anxiety, and somatic amplification (PDAS) symptoms, marked by high rates of co-morbidity and mutually maintaining mechanisms. Although recent frameworks have attempted to explain co-occurrence rates of pain and other comorbid disorders, the interrelations between PDAS and their impacts on pain outcomes have not been adequately examined with a person-centered approach. Using nationally representative data, this study assessed the heterogeneity in PDAS symptomatology and examined links among risk and protective factors in different profiles.
Data were derived from 1027 participants in the National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS) who completed telephone interviews or self-report measures that assessed PDAS, various sources of social supports (family, friends, spouses/partners, religion, coworkers, and supervisors), and the number of healthcare visits.
We found heterogeneity in symptom rather than symptom across classes over time. Regardless of comorbidity severity, people reported similar levels of somatic symptoms, which may help clinicians more effectively diagnose comorbidity issues among chronic pain patients. As PDAS symptomatology increased by group, the perceived levels of social support decreased. Membership in a higher symptom severity class was associated with being female, younger age, and an increase in medical, but not mental health visits.
Limitations included the use of a cross-sectional design, reliance on self-report measures, and a sample largely comprised of Whites.
PDAS co-occurs across classes, which may relate to shared risk and protective factors. This study lays the foundation to investigate similar questions for overlapping symptoms that occur during the same period, which would shed light on whether-among middle to older age adults-these disorders are attributable to a common mechanism and if they may inform treatments.
研究表明,慢性疼痛、抑郁、焦虑和躯体放大(PDAS)症状之间存在复杂的联系,其特征为高共病率和相互维持机制。尽管最近的理论框架试图解释疼痛与其他共病障碍的共现率,但尚未采用以人为主的方法充分研究PDAS之间的相互关系及其对疼痛结果的影响。本研究利用具有全国代表性的数据,评估了PDAS症状学的异质性,并研究了不同特征中的风险因素和保护因素之间的联系。
数据来自美国中年发展全国调查(MIDUS)的1027名参与者,他们完成了电话访谈或自我报告测量,评估了PDAS、各种社会支持来源(家庭、朋友、配偶/伴侣、宗教、同事和上司)以及医疗就诊次数。
我们发现,随着时间推移,不同类别之间症状存在异质性,而非症状 存在异质性。无论共病严重程度如何,人们报告的躯体症状水平相似这可能有助于临床医生更有效地诊断慢性疼痛患者的共病问题。随着PDAS症状学按组增加,感知到的社会支持水平下降。较高症状严重程度类别的成员身份与女性、较年轻以及医疗就诊次数增加有关,但与心理健康就诊次数增加无关。
局限性包括采用横断面设计、依赖自我报告测量以及样本主要由白人组成。
PDAS在不同类别中同时出现,这可能与共同的风险因素和保护因素有关。本研究为调查同期出现的重叠症状的类似问题奠定了基础,这将有助于揭示在中老年人群中,这些疾病是否归因于共同机制,以及它们是否可为治疗提供参考。