Banerjee Gourav, Brown Joel, McMichael Alana, Ben Abdallah Arbi, Buday Sarah, Barch Deanna M, Baranski Thomas, Haroutounian Simon, AuBuchon Jacob, Nahman-Averbuch Hadas
Washington University Pain Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Division of Clinical and Translational Research, Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Children (Basel). 2024 Dec 17;11(12):1528. doi: 10.3390/children11121528.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Variability in biopsychosocial factors can explain the interindividual variability in pain. One factor that can impact pain is the pain catastrophizing level. Interestingly, parental pain catastrophizing is related to the severity of the clinical pain of their children. This study explored whether parental pain catastrophizing is also associated with their children's experimental pain sensitivity.
Forty-five healthy girls (mean age 12.07 ± 1.47 years) and one of their parents participated in this study. Parents completed the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) about their child's pain (PCS-Parent) as well as their pain (PCS-Parent). Children completed the PCS about their pain (PCS-Child) and the Pubertal Developmental Scale (PDS). Children underwent psychophysical tests, including paradigms of temporal summation, heat- and pressure-conditioned pain modulation, offset analgesia, and cold pain tolerance. Correlations and regression models were conducted to assess the relationships between parental pain catastrophizing scales (separately for PCS-Parent and PCS-Parent) and experimental pain sensitivity with and without controlling for PCS-Child and PDS. T-tests were used to compare pain sensitivity between participants with vs. without a family history of psychiatric disorder.
No significant relationships were found between the experimental pain sensitivity measures and either PCS-Parent or PCS-Parent with and without controlling for PCS-Child and PDS. No differences were found in experimental pain sensitivity between participants with and without a family history of psychiatric disorder.
Parental pain catastrophizing may contribute minimally to the individual variability in experimental pain sensitivity of healthy adolescent girls.
背景/目的:生物心理社会因素的变异性可以解释个体间疼痛的变异性。一个可能影响疼痛的因素是疼痛灾难化水平。有趣的是,父母的疼痛灾难化与他们孩子临床疼痛的严重程度有关。本研究探讨了父母的疼痛灾难化是否也与他们孩子的实验性疼痛敏感性相关。
45名健康女孩(平均年龄12.07±1.47岁)及其一名父母参与了本研究。父母完成了关于他们孩子疼痛的疼痛灾难化量表(PCS-父母)以及他们自己的疼痛(PCS-父母)。孩子们完成了关于他们疼痛的PCS(PCS-儿童)和青春期发育量表(PDS)。孩子们接受了心理物理测试,包括时间总和、热和压力条件性疼痛调制、抵消镇痛和冷痛耐受性等范式。进行相关性和回归模型分析,以评估在控制和不控制PCS-儿童和PDS的情况下,父母疼痛灾难化量表(分别针对PCS-父母和PCS-父母)与实验性疼痛敏感性之间的关系。使用t检验比较有和没有精神疾病家族史的参与者之间的疼痛敏感性。
在控制和不控制PCS-儿童和PDS的情况下,实验性疼痛敏感性测量与PCS-父母或PCS-父母之间均未发现显著关系。有和没有精神疾病家族史的参与者在实验性疼痛敏感性方面没有差异。
父母的疼痛灾难化对健康青春期女孩实验性疼痛敏感性的个体变异性可能贡献极小。