超越疼痛隐私和疼痛测量仪:疼痛生物标志物的新愿景。

IF 2.5 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2024-10-03 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpain.2024.1397645
Charles Djordjevic, Carl Y Saab
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于一个人来说,疼痛无疑是真实存在的。而对于护理人员来说,评估他人的疼痛则是一个充满挑战和疑虑的过程。为了解释这一挑战,许多人假定疼痛只 "属于 "体验者,并接受疼痛是隐私的教条。然而,隐私也意味着不可能与他人识别、分享或交流这种体验。显然,事实并非如此,疼痛隐私权的后果将对医疗保健造成毁灭性打击。疼痛确实是独特的、主观的,但并不一定是隐私。事实上,疼痛是很容易传播的,尽管可能没有护理人员希望的那么有效和可靠。另一方面,医疗保健系统规定疼痛诊断必须采用客观指标。笑脸漫画是临床实践的主要内容,也是报告疼痛程度的通用标准。这些情况造成了双重悖论:既要评估无法触及的私人体验,又要使用数字量表来衡量主观属性。在这种充满压力的环境中,医疗专业人员会感到知识上的不协调,患者会感到沮丧,以价值为基础的医疗服务也会受到破坏。首先,我们引用哲学、行为学和神经科学的论据驳斥了疼痛的隐私化和客观化,为我们提供了一条出路。我们讨论了维特根斯坦反对隐私的观点,探讨了向他人传达疼痛的明显进化优势,并确定了哺乳动物大脑中有助于共情的神经回路。其次,我们强调疼痛的主观性,承认个体疼痛的复杂性和独特性。我们还提供了令人信服的证据,证明大脑机制能够根据预测编码原则积极塑造疼痛体验。第三,我们提出了开发生物标记技术的愿景,这些技术可以公平地评估疼痛,而不会对患者的叙述产生偏见。我们的建议基于对 "表情符号医学 "不足以捕捉疼痛的多维性这一压倒性认识。我们认为,最有希望成为疼痛生物标志物的候选者包括作为基本事实的自我报告,以及与疼痛生物学相关的生理特征。整合主观和客观的多模态特征将是开发综合疼痛评估模型的关键。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond pain privacy and pain meters: a new vision for pain biomarkers.

To an individual, pain is unambiguously real. To a caregiver, assessing pain in others is a challenging process shrouded in doubt. To explain this challenge, many assume that pain "belongs" exclusively to the bearer of that experience and accept the dogma that pain is private. However, privacy also entails that it is not possible to identify, share, or communicate that experience with others. Obviously, this is not true and the consequences of pain privacy would be devastating for healthcare. Pain is indeed unique and subjective, but not necessarily private. Pain is in fact readily communicable, though perhaps not as effectively and reliably as caregivers would like. On the other hand, healthcare systems mandate objective metrics in pain diagnosis. Smiley face caricatures are a staple of clinical practice and a universal standard for reporting pain levels. These conditions create a double paradox: Assess a private experience that is inaccessible, and use numerical scales to measure subjective attributes. Navigating this stressful environment, medical professionals experience intellectual dissonance, patients are frustrated, and value-based care is undermined. Offering a way out, first, we refute the privacy and objectification of pain citing philosophical, behavioral, and neuroscientific arguments. We discuss Wittgensteinian views against privacy, explore the clear evolutionary advantage of communicating pain to others, and identify neural circuits in the mammalian brain that contribute to empathy. Second, we highlight the subjectivity of pain, embracing the complexity and uniqueness of an individual's pain. We also provide compelling evidence for brain mechanisms that actively shape the pain experience according to predictive coding principles. Third, we offer a vision for the development of biomarker technologies that assess pain fairly without engendering bias against the patient's narrative. Our recommendations are based on the overwhelming appreciation that "medicine by emoji" is inadequate for capturing the multidimensional nature of pain. Our view is that the most promising candidates for pain biomarkers consist of self-reports as ground truth augmented by physiological signatures of biological relevance to pain. Integration of subjective and objective multimodal features will be key for the development of comprehensive pain assessment models.

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