Chronic Pain in a Biracial Cohort of Young Women.

Q3 Medicine
Octavia Plesh, Stuart A Gansky, Donald A Curtis
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

This is a longitudinal study of a large US biracial community cohort of 732 young women - 50% African-American and 50% Caucasian - specifically investigating incidence, remission, and progression of, as well as factors associated with common chronic pains (back, head, face, chest and abdomen). The results show back, head and abdominal pains were the most common, severe and persistent pains. Facial pain, although less common and severe, was the only pain presenting significant racial differences with Caucasians having higher prevalence, incidence and persistence; incidence per 1000 person-years was 58 for Caucasians and 18 for African-Americans while remission per 1000 person-years was 107 for Caucasians and 247 for African-Americans (p<0.05). Risk factors associated with incidence (I) differed from those associated with persistence(P), perhaps due to the young age and shorter pain duration in this population. Face pain incidence, but not persistence for example, was associated with student status, fatigue, perceived stress and general health. Depression does not seem to be associated with any of these pains. However, increased number of existing pain sites was related to subsequent increase chance of developing new pain (I) or maintaining the existing pain (P).

一项双种族年轻女性慢性疼痛研究。
这是一项针对732名年轻女性(50%是非裔美国人和50%白种人)的大型美国双种族社区队列的纵向研究,专门调查常见慢性疼痛(背部、头部、面部、胸部和腹部)的发病率、缓解和进展以及相关因素。结果显示,背部、头部和腹部疼痛是最常见的,严重和持续的疼痛。面部疼痛,虽然不常见和严重,但是唯一表现出显著种族差异的疼痛,白种人的患病率、发病率和持久性更高;白种人每1000人年的发病率为58,非裔美国人为18,白种人每1000人年的缓解率为107,非裔美国人为247
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
Open Pain Journal
Open Pain Journal Medicine-Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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