痛经严重程度和干扰对实验性疼痛反应的影响

S. K. Rogers, K. L. Nichols, N. Ahamadeen, M. L. Shanahan, K. L. Rand
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引用次数: 0

摘要

痛经与慢性疼痛和痛觉减退的风险增加有关。与无痛经者相比,痛经患者在经历实验性疼痛时更容易出现疼痛反应性升高。然而,还没有研究对痛经患者对实验性疼痛的反应进行组内差异分析。本研究的主要目的是探讨痛经严重程度和干扰在实验性疼痛体验中的相对作用。参与者为 120 名月经期患者,他们参与了一项大型研究,探讨期望对实验性疼痛的影响。作为研究的一部分,参与者填写了一份有关人口统计学和月经信息的在线问卷,并参加了一项冷压任务。根据对两个自变量的操作,参与者被随机分为四组:(1)对疼痛严重程度的高预期与低预期(疼痛预期);(2)对自身疼痛耐受程度的高预期与低预期(自我预期)。在整个冷压任务过程中,受试者使用 0-10 级量表对自己的疼痛严重程度进行口头评分。我们对痛经经历(即平均严重程度和干扰)和冷压器数据[疼痛严重程度评分和疼痛耐受性(即冷压器总时间)]之间的关系进行了回归分析,并控制了操纵性期望和年龄。当控制了操纵性期望和年龄后,痛经严重程度显著预测了初始疼痛严重程度评分(p = 0.022),但并不预测最终疼痛严重程度评分(p = 0.263)或疼痛耐受性(p = 0.120)。痛经干扰不能预测初始疼痛严重程度评分(p = 0.106)、最终疼痛严重程度评分(p = 0.134)或疼痛耐受性(p = 0.360)。调节分析表明,痛经严重程度与初始疼痛严重程度评级之间的关系不受疼痛预期的调节,χ2(1) = 0.412, p = 0.521.在实验引起的疼痛任务中,痛经严重程度而非干扰可预测初始疼痛严重程度评级,因此痛经严重程度越高,初始疼痛严重程度评级越高。这表明痛经越严重的人最初对疼痛的敏感度可能越高,对急性疼痛的敏感度可能会增加,并有可能发展成慢性疼痛。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of dysmenorrhea severity and interference on reactions to experimentally-induced pain
Dysmenorrhea is associated with increased risk of chronic pain and hyperalgesia. Menstruating individuals with dysmenorrhea are more likely to have elevated pain reactivity when experiencing experimental pain, than those without. However, no study has examined intragroup differences in reactions to experimentally induced pain for individuals with dysmenorrhea. The main aim of this study was to examine the relative roles of dysmenorrhea severity and interference in the experience of experimentally-induced pain.Participants were 120 menstruating individuals involved in a larger research study examining the influence of expectations on experimentally-induced pain. As part of the study, participants completed an online questionnaire regarding demographic and menstrual information and participated in a cold pressor task. Participants were randomized into four groups based on the manipulation of two independent variables: (1) high vs. low expectations about pain severity (pain-expectations); (2) and high vs. low expectations about one's pain tolerance (self-expectations). Participants verbally rated their pain severity throughout the cold pressor task using a 0–10 scale. Regression analyses were conducted examining the relationships between dysmenorrhea experience (i.e., average severity and interference) and cold pressor data [pain severity ratings and pain tolerance (i.e., total time in the cold pressor)], controlling for the manipulated expectations and age. Then, moderation analyses were conducted examining expectation group differences.When controlling for manipulated expectations and age, dysmenorrhea severity significantly predicted initial pain severity rating (p = 0.022) but did not predict final pain severity rating (p = 0.263) or pain tolerance (p = 0.120). Dysmenorrhea interference did not predict initial pain severity rating (p = 0.106), final pain severity rating (p = 0.134), or pain tolerance (p = 0.360). A moderation analysis indicated that the relationship between dysmenorrhea severity and initial pain severity rating was not moderated by pain-expectations, χ2(1) = 0.412, p = 0.521.During an experimentally-induced pain task, dysmenorrhea severity but not interference predicted initial pain severity rating, such that higher levels of dysmenorrhea severity predicted greater initial pain severity rating. This suggests individuals with more severe dysmenorrhea pain may experience greater initial sensitivity to pain and be at risk for increased sensitivity to acute pain and potentially the development of chronic pain.
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