Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California; Institute of Biomedical and Oral Research, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
J Pain. 2024 Oct;25(10):104490. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.02.004. Epub 2024 Feb 9.
Depression commonly co-occurs with chronic pain and can worsen pain outcomes. Recent theoretical work has hypothesized that pain localized to the left hemibody is a risk factor for worse depression due to overlap in underlying neural substrates. This hypothesis has not been tested a priori. Using a large sample of treatment-seeking adults with mixed-etiology chronic pain (N = 1,185), our cross-sectional study tested whether patients with left-sided pain endorse worse depressive symptoms. We also examined differences in other pain-related functioning measures. We tested 4 comparisons based on painful body areas using the CHOIR body map: 1) only left-sided (OL) versus any right-sided pain; 2) only right-sided (OR) versus any left-sided pain; 3) OL versus OR versus bilateral pain; and 4) more left-sided versus more right-sided versus equal-sided pain. Analysis of variance models showed OL pain was not associated with worse depression (F = 5.50, P = .019). Any left-sided pain was associated with worse depression, though the effect was small (F = 8.58, P = .003, Cohens d = .29). Bilateral pain was associated with worse depression (F = 8.05, P < .001, Cohens d = .24-.33). Regardless of pain location, more body areas endorsed was associated with greater depression. Although a more rigorous assessment of pain laterality is needed, our findings do not support the hypothesis that left-lateralized pain is associated with worse depression. PERSPECTIVE: Pain lateralized to the left side of the body has been hypothesized as a risk factor for worse depression in chronic pain, despite never being tested in a large, real-world sample of patients with chronic pain. Findings showed that more widespread pain, not pain laterality, was associated with worse depression.
抑郁症常与慢性疼痛并存,并可能使疼痛结果恶化。最近的理论工作假设,左半身局部疼痛是导致抑郁加重的一个危险因素,因为其潜在的神经基础存在重叠。这一假设尚未预先进行测试。本横断面研究使用了一个患有混合病因慢性疼痛的治疗寻求者的大型样本(N=1185),检验了左侧疼痛患者是否有更严重的抑郁症状。我们还检查了其他与疼痛相关的功能测量指标的差异。我们使用 CHOIR 身体图谱基于疼痛部位进行了 4 项比较:1)仅左侧(OL)与任何右侧疼痛;2)仅右侧(OR)与任何左侧疼痛;3)OL 与 OR 与双侧疼痛;4)左侧多于右侧多于双侧疼痛。方差分析模型显示 OL 疼痛与抑郁症状无显著相关性(F=5.50,P=.019)。任何左侧疼痛与抑郁症状更严重相关,尽管效果较小(F=8.58,P=.003,Cohens d=.29)。双侧疼痛与抑郁症状更严重相关(F=8.05,P<.001,Cohens d=.24-.33)。无论疼痛位置如何,更多的身体区域疼痛与更大的抑郁相关。尽管需要对疼痛的偏侧性进行更严格的评估,但我们的研究结果不支持左侧疼痛与更严重抑郁相关的假设。观点:身体左侧的疼痛已被假设为慢性疼痛中抑郁加重的一个危险因素,但尚未在患有慢性疼痛的大型真实患者样本中进行测试。研究结果表明,更广泛的疼痛,而不是疼痛的偏侧性,与更严重的抑郁相关。