Relationships between pain cognitions and physical function in a sample of racially diverse, sedentary individuals with chronic pain.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain Practice Pub Date : 2025-04-01 DOI:10.1111/papr.70031
Hannah M Fisher, Sarah A Kelleher, Tamara J Somers, Francis J Keefe, Julia E Hooker, Katherine A McDermott, Danielle E La Camera, Julie R Brewer, John Burns, Rebecca W Jeddi, Ronald Kulich, Gary Polykoff, Robert A Parker, Jonathan Greenberg, Ana-Maria Vranceanu
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Abstract

Background: Pain from musculoskeletal pain conditions is often persistent, bothersome, and negatively impacts physical function. Individuals with musculoskeletal pain report difficulty with walking and regular activities. For some, this may be related to overly negative pain cognitions, such as pain catastrophizing and kinesiophobia. In a geographically and racially diverse sample, we examined relationships between pain catastrophizing, kinesiophobia, and multimodal physical function (i.e., self-report, performance-based, objective).

Methods: Participants were sedentary adults with ≥3 months of chronic musculoskeletal pain. Participants completed self-report measures of pain catastrophizing (Pain Catastrophizing Scale), kinesiophobia (Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia), and physical function (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Scale 2.0). Performance-based physical function was assessed in-clinic with the Six-Minute Walk Test (6MWT). Physical function was objectively measured with ≥4 days of ActiGraph wear outside the clinic. We conducted descriptive, correlation, and linear regression statistics in SPSS.

Results: Higher levels of pain catastrophizing (β = 0.42) and kinesiophobia (β = 0.25) were significantly associated with worse self-reported physical function. Neither pain catastrophizing nor kinesiophobia were related to performance-based or objectively measured physical function. The direction and significance of relationships between pain catastrophizing, kinesiophobia, and physical function measures were consistent in unadjusted and adjusted regression models.

Conclusions: Pain catastrophizing and kinesiophobia are associated with an individual's perceived physical functioning. Behavioral interventions designed to enhance physical function may benefit from including cognitive restructuring to challenge catastrophic thoughts about pain, as well as thoughts about injuring oneself or worsening pain with movement. More work is needed to understand why neither pain catastrophizing nor kinesiophobia were significantly associated with performance-based or objective assessment of physical function. It is possible that other pain-related cognitions, for example self-efficacy for pain control, or variables (e.g., in vivo pain catastrophizing, mood, stress, sleep) assessed closer in time to performance-based or objective measures of physical function are more relevant.

在一组不同种族、久坐不动的慢性疼痛患者中,疼痛认知与身体功能之间的关系。
背景:由肌肉骨骼疼痛引起的疼痛通常是持续性的,令人烦恼的,并对身体功能产生负面影响。患有肌肉骨骼疼痛的个体报告行走和常规活动困难。对一些人来说,这可能与过度消极的疼痛认知有关,比如疼痛灾难化和运动恐惧症。在一个地域和种族多样化的样本中,我们研究了疼痛灾难化、运动恐惧症和多模态身体功能(即自我报告、基于表现、客观)之间的关系。方法:参与者为久坐不动且慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛≥3个月的成年人。参与者完成疼痛灾难(疼痛灾难量表)、运动恐惧症(坦帕运动恐惧症量表)和身体功能(世界卫生组织残疾评估量表2.0)的自我报告测量。在临床使用6分钟步行测试(6MWT)评估基于表现的身体功能。在临床外佩戴ActiGraph≥4天客观测量身体功能。我们在SPSS中进行了描述性、相关性和线性回归统计。结果:较高水平的疼痛灾难化(β = 0.42)和运动恐惧症(β = 0.25)与自我报告的较差的身体功能显著相关。疼痛灾难和运动恐惧症都与基于表现或客观测量的身体功能无关。在未调整和调整的回归模型中,疼痛灾难化、运动恐惧症和身体功能测量之间的关系方向和意义是一致的。结论:疼痛灾难化和运动恐惧症与个体感知的身体功能有关。旨在增强身体功能的行为干预可能受益于包括认知重组来挑战关于疼痛的灾难性想法,以及关于伤害自己或运动加剧疼痛的想法。需要做更多的工作来理解为什么疼痛灾难化和运动恐惧症与基于表现的或客观的身体功能评估没有显著关联。其他与疼痛相关的认知,如疼痛控制的自我效能,或变量(如体内疼痛灾难化、情绪、压力、睡眠)的评估更接近于基于表现的或客观的身体功能测量,这可能更相关。
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来源期刊
Pain Practice
Pain Practice ANESTHESIOLOGY-CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
3.80%
发文量
92
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pain Practice, the official journal of the World Institute of Pain, publishes international multidisciplinary articles on pain and analgesia that provide its readership with up-to-date research, evaluation methods, and techniques for pain management. Special sections including the Consultant’s Corner, Images in Pain Practice, Case Studies from Mayo, Tutorials, and the Evidence-Based Medicine combine to give pain researchers, pain clinicians and pain fellows in training a systematic approach to continuing education in pain medicine. Prior to publication, all articles and reviews undergo peer review by at least two experts in the field.
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