Centre for Academic Child Health, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
Centre for Academic Child Health, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Paediatr Open. 2022 Feb;6(1). doi: 10.1136/bmjpo-2021-001201. Epub 2022 Feb 15.
Moderate to severe pain affects up to two-thirds of children with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) and is associated with worse fatigue and physical functioning. This research aims to gain a greater insight into pain experienced by these children.
Thematic analysis of qualitative data from semistructured interviews with 13 children with CFS/ME (mean age=15.3 years, 67% female) was completed.
Thematic analysis enabled construction of three themes: children's wide-ranging experiences of pain, negative impact of pain and lack of effective treatment for pain and nine subthemes. The first theme demonstrated highly varied pain experiences, ranging from 'like [being]… on fire', like 'being stabbed' to 'like…lead'. Children experienced pain in multiple sites and with wide-ranging frequency and severity. The second theme highlighted the profound negative impact of pain on multiple aspects of children's lives. Physical activity was severely impaired; some children 'couldn't leave bed' or 'couldn't…brush [their] own hair'. Abdominal pain meant some would 'go…days without eating'. Pain substantially impacted on mental health, leaving children feeling 'agitated', experiencing 'really bad panic attacks' or making them '[want to] breakdown'. Children felt they 'can't do the things that everyone else can do', had 'missed out' and are 'behind everyone'. Some avoided socialising as they 'don't want to stop everyone else'. The final theme demonstrates the absence of adequate treatment for pain, with participants reporting 'nothing has ever really got rid of it' and only 'slightly [takes] the edge off' and other experiencing side effects.
Pain in paediatric CFS/ME is highly variable, common and often results in severe physical limitation and poor mental health. Effective treatments for pain represent an unmet need.
慢性疲劳综合征/肌痛性脑脊髓炎(CFS/ME)患儿中多达三分之二的人会出现中度至重度疼痛,且疼痛与更严重的疲劳和身体功能障碍相关。本研究旨在更深入地了解这些患儿的疼痛体验。
对 13 名 CFS/ME 患儿(平均年龄 15.3 岁,67%为女性)的半结构化访谈进行了定性数据分析的主题分析。
主题分析构建了三个主题:儿童广泛的疼痛体验、疼痛的负面影响以及缺乏有效的疼痛治疗,以及九个子主题。第一个主题展示了高度多样化的疼痛体验,从“像……着火了”、“像被刺伤”到“像……铅”。儿童在多个部位经历疼痛,频率和严重程度各不相同。第二个主题突出了疼痛对儿童生活多方面的深远负面影响。身体活动严重受损;有些孩子“不能离开床”或“不能……自己梳头”。腹痛导致一些孩子“连续几天不吃饭”。疼痛严重影响了心理健康,让孩子感到“烦躁不安”,经历“非常严重的恐慌发作”,或者让他们“崩溃”。孩子觉得自己“不能做其他人能做的事情”,“错过了”,“落后于所有人”。有些孩子避免社交,因为他们“不想打扰其他人”。最后一个主题表明,疼痛的治疗方法并不充分,参与者报告“没有什么能真正消除疼痛”,只能“稍微减轻一点”,而其他参与者则经历了副作用。
儿科 CFS/ME 中的疼痛具有高度可变性、普遍性,并且常常导致严重的身体限制和较差的心理健康。有效的疼痛治疗方法代表了一种未满足的需求。