Exploring the relationship between pain, cognition, and chronic conditions: insights from the HAALSI study in rural South Africa.

Camryn Dixon, Tamara P Taporoski, F Xavier Gomez-Olive Casas, Stephen M Tollman, Lisa F Berkman, Darina T Bassil
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Abstract

Background: Research on cognition and pain is limited in Low and Middle-income Countries (LMICs) and understanding how chronic conditions and pain treatment may moderate this association is underexplored. This study aimed to explore the relationship between pain and cognition and the moderating effect of hypertension, diabetes, HIV, pain treatment, and depressive symptoms.

Methods: We analyzed data from 3803 individuals enrolled in the HAALSI study, a longitudinal population study of older adults in Agincourt, South Africa. Pain was measured with the Brief Pain Inventory. Cognition was assessed using a composite of orientation questions, a memory test, and the Trails Making Test B. Chronic conditions were assessed using biological measures, and depressive symptoms were measured using the CES-D scale. Linear regression models were used to investigate the relationship.

Results: Baseline and longitudinal pain were significantly associated with poorer episodic memory (ß = -0.17 [P < .001]; ß = -0.18 [P < .001]). Hypertension amplified the negative effect of pain on episodic memory, while diabetes and HIV did not moderate the relationship between pain and cognition (ß = -0.10 [.006]). Pain treatment was associated with poorer cognitive performance. Depressive symptoms moderated the relationship between pain and both cognition and executive function (EF) (P = .02). The negative effect of pain on episodic memory was observed in individuals with both acute and persisting pain, while it only affected EF in those with acute pain.

Conclusions: These findings highlight the importance of examining factors that may moderate the relationship between pain and cognition and strategies to mitigate the effect pain has on cognition, particularly in LMICs.

Abstract Image

探索疼痛、认知和慢性疾病之间的关系:来自南非农村HAALSI研究的见解。
背景:关于认知和疼痛的研究在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)是有限的,并且了解慢性疾病和疼痛治疗如何调节这种关联尚未得到充分探索。本研究旨在探讨疼痛与认知的关系,以及高血压、糖尿病、HIV、疼痛治疗和抑郁症状的调节作用。方法:我们分析了3803名参加HAALSI研究的个体的数据,HAALSI研究是一项针对南非阿金库尔老年人的纵向人口研究。用简短疼痛量表测量疼痛。认知能力的评估采用定向问题、记忆测试和轨迹制造测试b的组合。慢性病的评估采用生物测量,抑郁症状的测量采用CES-D量表。采用线性回归模型来研究两者之间的关系。结果:基线和纵向疼痛与较差的情景记忆显著相关(β = -0.17) [p]结论:这些发现强调了研究可能缓和疼痛和认知之间关系的因素以及减轻疼痛对认知影响的策略的重要性,特别是在中低收入人群中。
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