慢性非恶性疼痛患者抑郁与焦虑的相关性研究

Irena Kovačević, Sanja Ledinski Fičko, B. Ilić, Adriano Friganović, Štefanija Ozimec Vulinec, V. Krikšić
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引用次数: 0

摘要

介绍。三分之二的初级保健抑郁症患者还存在躯体症状,这使得抑郁症的检测更加困难。初级卫生保健是筛查抑郁症的第一级,早期发现是治疗成功的关键。焦虑与慢性疼痛也有很高的合并症。广泛性焦虑障碍(GAD)在患有“医学上无法解释的”慢性疼痛和慢性身体疾病的患者中很常见,也是创伤后慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛的预测指标。属于不同的种族群体,初级保健医生对这些差异的无知可能是获得良好卫生保健的障碍,特别是对抑郁症状的早期识别。这一提议的目的,系统的工作是得出结论,从实证研究处理过程涉及检查抑郁,焦虑,慢性非恶性疼痛。本综述的研究问题是探讨抑郁和焦虑与慢性非恶性疼痛的相关性。目的是探讨初级卫生保健在慢性非恶性疼痛患者抑郁和焦虑的识别、预防和治疗中的作用,以及抑郁、焦虑和慢性非恶性疼痛之间的相关性是否存在种族差异。鉴定该研究的方法来源于Medline数据库(通过PubMed)。该分析包括自2011年以来发表的所有英文科学论文,无论采用何种方法。这些论文探讨了抑郁、焦虑和慢性非恶性疼痛之间的相关性,并纳入了18岁以上患有慢性非恶性疼痛、同时存在抑郁和焦虑症状或属于少数民族的初级保健患者。共检索到403篇文章,包括原创论文和综述论文,经过详细阅读,从中选出10篇符合本综述的纳入标准。与没有慢性疼痛的人(12%)相比,慢性疼痛患者(23%)的抑郁和焦虑明显更多。最常见的是慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛,三分之一的患者患有抑郁症。抑郁和焦虑与疼痛的强度和持续时间显著相关。慢性疼痛和抑郁也因种族而异,文化差异和语言障碍是早期发现抑郁症的障碍。结论。抑郁症是与慢性疼痛相关的最常见的心理健康障碍。为了在早期预防严重抑郁症和慢性疼痛的发展,同时治疗抑郁症和疼痛是非常重要的。初级保健一级的综合方案预计将对病人的身体和精神状况产生积极影响。文化差异和种族差异可以大大减少初级保健一级对抑郁症状的发现,因此当然应该加以考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Correlation between Depression and Anxiety in Patients with Chronic Non-Malignant Pain
Introduction. Two-thirds of primary care patients with depression also have somatic symptoms present, making detection of depression more difficult. Primary health care is the first level of screening for depression, and early detection is key to treatment success. Anxiety also has a high comorbidity rate with chronic pain conditions. Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is common among patients with “medically unexplained” chronic pain and chronic physical illness and is also a predictor of chronic musculoskeletal pain after trauma. Belonging to different ethnic groups and ignorance of these differences by primary care physicians can be an obstacle to good health care, especially early recognition of depressive symptoms. Aim. The aim of this proposed, systematic work was to draw conclusions from empirical research dealing with the processes involved in the examination of depression, anxiety, and chronic non malignant pain. The research question for this review paper was to examine the correlation of depression and anxiety with chronic non-malignant pain. The aim was to examine the role of primary health care in recognizing, preventing, and treating depression and anxiety in patients with chronic non-malignant pain, and whether there is a difference in the correlation between depression, anxiety, and chronic non-malignant pain according to ethnicity. Methods. Methods for identifying the study were derived from the Medline database (via PubMed). The analysis included all scientific papers in English, regardless of methodology, published since 2011. The papers dealt with the correlation between depression, anxiety, and chronic non-malignant pain, and included the population of primary care patients over 18 years of age who suffer from chronic nonmalignant pain and at the same time have symptoms of depression and anxiety present or are members of ethnic groups. 403 articles were found, original and review papers, of which, after a detailed reading, 10 were selected that meet the inclusion criteria for the purposes of this review. Results. Depression and anxiety are significantly more present in people with chronic pain (23%), compared to those who do not have chronic pain (12%). The most common is chronic musculoskeletal pain, with one-third of patients having depression. Depression and anxiety are significantly associated with the intensity and duration of pain. Chronic pain and depression also differ according to ethnic groups, with cultural differences and language barriers being a barrier to early detection of depression. Conclusion. Depression is the most common mental health disorder associated with chronic pain. It is extremely important to treat both depression and pain, in order to prevent the development of severe depression and chronic pain at an early stage. The integrated program at the level of primary health care is expected to have positive effects on both the physical and mental condition of patients. Cultural differences and ethnicity, which can significantly reduce the detection of depressive symptoms at the primary health care level, should certainly be taken into account.
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