School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia.
Pain. 2023 Jul 1;164(7):1593-1599. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002864. Epub 2023 Jan 5.
Reduced conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and psychological distress co-occur frequently in many pain conditions. This study explored whether common negative pain cognitions and emotional factors were related to lower CPM in individuals across the spectrum from acute to chronic pain. Previously collected data on the CPM effect, pain-related cognitions (fear of movement, pain catastrophizing), and emotional distress (depression, anxiety) through questionnaires from 1142 individuals with acute, subacute, or chronic pain were used. The presence of negative psychological factors was dichotomized according to cutoff values for questionnaires. Associations between the presence of each negative psychological factor and the amplitude of pain reduction in the CPM paradigm was explored with Generalized Linear Models adjusted for sex, age, body mass index, and pain duration. A secondary analysis explored the cumulative effect of psychological factors on CPM. When dichotomized according to cutoff scores, 20% of participants were classified with anxiety, 19% with depression, 36% with pain catastrophizing, and 48% with fear of movement. The presence of any negative psychological factor or the cumulative sum of negative psychological factors was associated with lower CPM (individual factor: β between -0.15 and 0.11, P ≥ 0.08; total: β between -0.27 and -0.12, P ≥ 0.06). Despite the common observation of psychological factors and reduced CPM in musculoskeletal pain, these data challenge the assumption of a linear relationship between these variables across individuals with acute, subacute, and chronic pain. Arguably, there was a nonsignificant tendency for associations in nonexpected directions, which should be studied in a more homogenous population.
条件性疼痛调制(CPM)降低和心理困扰在许多疼痛病症中经常同时出现。本研究探讨了在从急性到慢性疼痛的个体中,常见的消极疼痛认知和情绪因素是否与较低的 CPM 相关。先前通过问卷收集了 1142 名急性、亚急性或慢性疼痛患者的 CPM 效应、与疼痛相关的认知(运动恐惧、疼痛灾难化)和情绪困扰(抑郁、焦虑)的数据。根据问卷的截断值将消极心理因素的存在分为二分类。使用广义线性模型,根据性别、年龄、体重指数和疼痛持续时间调整模型,探讨了每种消极心理因素的存在与 CPM 范式中疼痛减轻幅度之间的关联。二次分析探讨了心理因素对 CPM 的累积效应。根据截断分数进行二分类时,20%的参与者被归类为焦虑,19%为抑郁,36%为疼痛灾难化,48%为运动恐惧。任何消极心理因素的存在或消极心理因素的累积总和与较低的 CPM 相关(个体因素:β 在-0.15 到 0.11 之间,P≥0.08;总:β 在-0.27 到-0.12 之间,P≥0.06)。尽管在肌肉骨骼疼痛中经常观察到心理因素和降低的 CPM,但这些数据挑战了在急性、亚急性和慢性疼痛个体中这些变量之间存在线性关系的假设。可以说,在非预期方向上存在关联的非显著趋势,应该在更同质的人群中进行研究。