Milani Sadaf Arefi, Gutierrez Sirena, O'Grady Brandon, Wong Rebeca, Samper-Ternent Rafael, Downer Brian
Department of Epidemiology, University of Texas Medical Branch, USA; Sealy Center on Aging, University of Texas Medical Branch, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, USA.
J Pain. 2025 Jul;32:105416. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2025.105416. Epub 2025 Apr 30.
Pain is associated with cognitive decline, but prior research has not considered differences between high- and low-impact chronic pain or low-and middle-income countries, such as Mexico. Our objective was to evaluate the association between high-impact chronic pain and cognitive decline among older adults in Mexico. We used data from the 2012-2018 Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS), a nationally representative study of older Mexican adults (60+). Pain, measured at each wave, was categorized as high-impact chronic pain (pain that limits daily activities), low-impact chronic pain (pain that did not limit daily activities), and no chronic pain. Cognition was measured at each wave using the MHAS cognitive battery, and scores were standardized for global cognitive performance, memory, and non-memory domains. We used linear mixed models with inverse probability weights to evaluate the association between pain and cognition over time. At baseline (n=9056), 19.3% of participants reported high-impact pain and 20.1% reported low-impact chronic pain. Participants with high-impact pain had lower baseline global cognition [β: -0.024, 95% confidence interval (CI): -0.045, -0.004] and memory scores (β: -0.042, 95% CI: -0.074, -0.010) compared to those with no chronic pain. Change in cognition over time did not differ by pain, except for the memory domain, where those with high-impact pain experienced slower decline compared to those with no chronic pain. Low-impact chronic pain was not associated with any cognitive outcome. Better pain treatment may result in benefits in cognitive performance for those with pain. PERSPECTIVE: We found that high-impact chronic pain was associated with worse cognition at baseline, but not with cognitive decline. Memory domains were particularly affected by high-impact chronic pain. Early pain treatment and management may provide cognitive benefits for those living with pain.
疼痛与认知能力下降有关,但先前的研究尚未考虑高影响性慢性疼痛和低影响性慢性疼痛之间的差异,也未考虑墨西哥等中低收入国家的情况。我们的目标是评估墨西哥老年人中高影响性慢性疼痛与认知能力下降之间的关联。我们使用了2012 - 2018年墨西哥健康与老龄化研究(MHAS)的数据,该研究是一项针对墨西哥老年成年人(60岁及以上)的全国代表性研究。每次随访时测量的疼痛被分为高影响性慢性疼痛(限制日常活动的疼痛)、低影响性慢性疼痛(不限制日常活动的疼痛)和无慢性疼痛。每次随访时使用MHAS认知测试组合测量认知能力,并对全球认知表现、记忆和非记忆领域的得分进行标准化。我们使用带有逆概率权重的线性混合模型来评估随时间推移疼痛与认知之间的关联。在基线时(n = 9056),19.3%的参与者报告有高影响性疼痛,20.1%的参与者报告有低影响性慢性疼痛。与无慢性疼痛的参与者相比,有高影响性疼痛的参与者基线全球认知得分更低[β:-0.024,95%置信区间(CI):-0.045,-0.004],记忆得分也更低(β:-0.042,95% CI:-0.074,-0.010)。除记忆领域外,随时间推移认知能力的变化在不同疼痛组之间没有差异,在记忆领域,有高影响性疼痛的参与者与无慢性疼痛的参与者相比,认知能力下降更慢。低影响性慢性疼痛与任何认知结果均无关联。更好的疼痛治疗可能会给疼痛患者的认知表现带来益处。观点:我们发现高影响性慢性疼痛与基线时较差的认知能力有关,但与认知能力下降无关。记忆领域尤其受到高影响性慢性疼痛的影响。早期的疼痛治疗和管理可能会给疼痛患者带来认知方面的益处。