Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University.
J Psychopathol Clin Sci. 2023 Nov;132(8):984-995. doi: 10.1037/abn0000853. Epub 2023 Aug 21.
Competing models suggest that physical pain may play an important role in nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) via pain onset or pain offset, or that pain may be absent (analgesia). Few studies have tested these models in the same sample or examined factors that could explain differences in NSSI pain experience. We assessed 1,630 individuals with NSSI histories in an online survey. We descriptively examined pain during NSSI and tested preregistered hypotheses that NSSI frequency, NSSI severity, borderline personality disorder (BPD) features, emotional pain, and dissociation during NSSI are associated with experiencing less NSSI pain. Exploratorily, we also tested whether self-punishment motives were associated with less NSSI pain. Almost all participants reported recent and frequent NSSI. Participants were heterogenous in their report of NSSI pain. We found minimal support for analgesia (reported by only 4.3% of participants). More participants reported pain onset than offset, but offset was associated with reductions in emotional pain. Emotional pain was elevated prior to NSSI and decreased significantly during and after NSSI. We found that higher dissociation during NSSI was associated with less NSSI pain. Contrary to hypotheses, NSSI severity, emotional pain prior to NSSI, and self-punishment motives were associated with NSSI pain. NSSI frequency and BPD features were not associated with NSSI pain. BPD features interacted with dissociation and emotional pain prior to NSSI. Findings contrast with laboratory pain induction work, suggesting that, though people who self-harm may have heightened pain tolerance, they may seek to self-injure in a manner that results in pain. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
竞争模型表明,通过疼痛发作或疼痛缓解,身体疼痛可能在非自杀性自伤(NSSI)中发挥重要作用,或者疼痛可能不存在(镇痛)。很少有研究在同一样本中测试这些模型,也没有研究检查可能解释 NSSI 疼痛体验差异的因素。我们在一项在线调查中评估了 1630 名有 NSSI 病史的个体。我们描述性地检查了 NSSI 期间的疼痛,并检验了预先注册的假设,即 NSSI 频率、NSSI 严重程度、边缘型人格障碍(BPD)特征、NSSI 期间的情绪疼痛和分离与体验到较少的 NSSI 疼痛有关。探索性地,我们还测试了自我惩罚动机是否与较少的 NSSI 疼痛有关。几乎所有参与者都报告了最近和频繁的 NSSI。参与者在报告 NSSI 疼痛方面存在异质性。我们发现镇痛(只有 4.3%的参与者报告)的支持很少。更多的参与者报告了疼痛发作,而不是疼痛缓解,但疼痛缓解与情绪疼痛的减少有关。情绪疼痛在 NSSI 之前升高,并在 NSSI 期间和之后显著降低。我们发现,NSSI 期间较高的分离与较少的 NSSI 疼痛有关。与假设相反,NSSI 严重程度、NSSI 前的情绪疼痛和自我惩罚动机与 NSSI 疼痛有关。NSSI 频率和 BPD 特征与 NSSI 疼痛无关。BPD 特征与分离和 NSSI 前的情绪疼痛相互作用。研究结果与实验室疼痛诱导工作相矛盾,表明,尽管自残的人可能有更高的疼痛耐受能力,但他们可能会以导致疼痛的方式寻求自我伤害。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。