Psychosocial mechanisms underlying the transition from acute to chronic postsurgical pain in youth following spinal fusion: a 6-month longitudinal study.

IF 5.9 1区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Rui Li,Andrew H Rogers,Ayesha C Sujan,Chuan Zhou,Prishha Thiagarajan,Tonya M Palermo,Zeev N Kain,Jennifer A Rabbitts
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Abstract

Theoretical and empirical work underscores the role of postsurgical acute pain severity and psychosocial factors in the development of chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). However, evidence on how psychosocial changes in response to acute pain influence CPSP development in adolescents is limited. In this 6-month longitudinal study, adolescents undergoing spinal fusion were assessed presurgery, monitored for 30 days postsurgery, and re-evaluated at 8 weeks and 6 months. We examined changes in adolescent psychosocial factors (depression, anxiety, and pain catastrophizing) and parental distress from presurgery to 8 weeks postsurgery and tested their mediating effects between postsurgical acute pain intensity and interference, and CPSP development at 6 months. Among 160 adolescents included (10-18 years [M = 14.6, SD = 2.1]; 77% female; 17% Hispanic), 34% developed CPSP (pain intensity ≥3 and quality of life impairment) at 6 months. Adolescents who developed CPSP had higher pain intensity, psychological distress, and parental distress presurgery and 8 weeks postsurgery. Longitudinal causal mediation analyses controlling for sex and presurgery pain and psychosocial factors revealed that changes in adolescent anxiety and pain catastrophizing from presurgery to 8 weeks postsurgery mediated the link between postsurgical acute pain intensity and CPSP, explaining 13.8% and 11.0% of the effect, respectively. In addition, changes in adolescent pain catastrophizing mediated the association between acute pain interference and CPSP, explaining 19.6% of the effect. Significant mediation effects were not observed for changes in adolescent depression or parental distress. Anxiety symptoms and pain catastrophizing are actionable targets both before and after surgery to reduce CPSP development in adolescence.
青少年脊柱融合术后从急性到慢性术后疼痛转变的心理社会机制:一项为期6个月的纵向研究。
理论和实证工作强调了术后急性疼痛严重程度和心理社会因素在慢性术后疼痛(CPSP)发展中的作用。然而,关于急性疼痛反应的社会心理变化如何影响青少年CPSP发展的证据有限。在这项为期6个月的纵向研究中,对接受脊柱融合术的青少年进行术前评估,术后30天监测,并在8周和6个月时重新评估。我们检查了青少年心理社会因素(抑郁、焦虑和疼痛灾难化)和父母痛苦从手术前到术后8周的变化,并测试了它们在术后急性疼痛强度和干扰以及6个月时CPSP发展之间的中介作用。纳入的160名青少年(10 ~ 18岁)[M = 14.6, SD = 2.1];77%的女性;17%西班牙裔),34%在6个月时发生CPSP(疼痛强度≥3,生活质量受损)。发生CPSP的青少年在手术前和术后8周均有较高的疼痛强度、心理困扰和父母困扰。控制性别、手术前疼痛和社会心理因素的纵向因果中介分析显示,从手术前到术后8周青少年焦虑和疼痛灾难化的变化介导了术后急性疼痛强度和CPSP之间的联系,分别解释了13.8%和11.0%的影响。此外,青少年疼痛灾难化的变化介导了急性疼痛干扰和CPSP之间的关联,解释了19.6%的效应。在青少年抑郁或父母痛苦的改变中未观察到显著的中介效应。焦虑症状和疼痛灾难化是手术前后减少青少年CPSP发展的可行目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
PAIN®
PAIN® 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
8.10%
发文量
242
审稿时长
9 months
期刊介绍: PAIN® is the official publication of the International Association for the Study of Pain and publishes original research on the nature,mechanisms and treatment of pain.PAIN® provides a forum for the dissemination of research in the basic and clinical sciences of multidisciplinary interest.
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