Quillen M A, Denney D R
J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry. 1982 Jun;13(2):123-30. doi: 10.1016/0005-7916(82)90053-2.
An adaptation of Anxiety Management Training was evaluated as a means of teaching women to use relaxation in order to control menstrual pain and discomfort. After reporting their menstrual symptoms for two successive baseline periods, spasmodic and congestive dysmenorrheic subjects received four individual sessions of pain management training. Following treatment, these subjects reported significant reductions in pain, discomfort, interference, and time loss due to dysmenorrheic symptoms relative to their own baselines and to an untreated control group. These effects were still in evidence 18 months after treatment and appeared to have generalized to behavioral, attentional and autonomic symptoms that might be considered secondary sequelae of dysmenorrhea. With one minor exception, there was no differential response to treatment by spasmodic as opposed to congestive subjects.
对焦虑管理训练的一种改编形式进行了评估,以此作为教导女性运用放松技巧来控制痛经及不适的一种方法。在连续两个基线期报告了她们的月经症状后,痉挛性痛经和充血性痛经的受试者接受了四次疼痛管理训练的个体辅导课程。治疗后,相对于她们自身的基线水平以及未接受治疗的对照组,这些受试者报告称痛经症状导致的疼痛、不适、干扰及时间损失显著减少。这些效果在治疗后18个月仍很明显,并且似乎已扩展至可能被视为痛经继发症状的行为、注意力及自主神经症状。除了一个小例外,痉挛性痛经受试者与充血性痛经受试者对治疗没有差异反应。