Eleonora C V Costa, Patrícia Gonçalves, Fernando Martins, Sílvia Monteiro, Carla Pais-Vieira
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Childhood trauma is increasingly recognized as a key risk factor for autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysregulation and chronic pain. However, the mechanisms underlying this association remain insufficiently explored, particularly within integrated healthcare frameworks. Objective: This study examined whether autonomic reactivity mediates the relationship between childhood trauma and pain severity while accounting for age and gender. Methods: A total of 124 participants-64 with formally documented interpersonal trauma and 60 without-completed validated measures of childhood trauma (CTQ), cumulative trauma (LEC-17), autonomic reactivity (BPQ), and pain severity (BPI). Group comparisons, correlation analyses, and hierarchical regressions were used to assess associations among variables. A mediation model was used to test whether autonomic reactivity explained the trauma-pain relationship. Results: Trauma-exposed participants showed significantly higher autonomic reactivity than those without, while pain severity did not differ significantly between groups (p < 0.001). Childhood physical and emotional abuse was strongly associated with autonomic reactivity and moderately associated with pain severity but not directly linked to pain. Mediation analysis supported a full mediation, with childhood trauma predicting pain severity indirectly via autonomic reactivity (β = 0.220, 95% CI [0.087-0.422], p = 0.009). A preliminary gender effect on the trauma-ANS pathway was observed but was not sustained in weighted models correcting for sample imbalance. Conclusions: Autonomic dysregulation was found to mediate the link between childhood trauma and pain vulnerability. Incorporating autonomic assessment into trauma-informed, integrated healthcare could inform early detection and tailored interventions, with preliminary evidence suggesting generalizability across gender.
期刊介绍:
Healthcare (ISSN 2227-9032) is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal (free for readers), which publishes original theoretical and empirical work in the interdisciplinary area of all aspects of medicine and health care research. Healthcare publishes Original Research Articles, Reviews, Case Reports, Research Notes and Short Communications. We encourage researchers to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. For theoretical papers, full details of proofs must be provided so that the results can be checked; for experimental papers, full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. Additionally, electronic files or software regarding the full details of the calculations, experimental procedure, etc., can be deposited along with the publication as “Supplementary Material”.