Testing a Combined Cognitive Bias Hypothesis of Pain and Pain-related Worry in Young People

被引:1
|
作者
Kavallari, Despoina [1 ]
Lau, Jennifer Y. F. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Inst Psychiat Psychol & Neurosci, Psychol Dept, London, England
[2] Queen Mary Univ London, Inst Populat Hlth Sci, Youth Resilience Unit, London, England
来源
JOURNAL OF PAIN | 2022年 / 23卷 / 06期
关键词
Combined cognitive bias; cognitive control; cognitive style; pain-related worry; cata-strophizing; youth; MULTIPLE-REGRESSION; ATTENTIONAL BIASES; BODILY THREAT; MEMORY BIASES; ADOLESCENTS; INFORMATION; CHILDREN; ANXIETY; METAANALYSIS; DISABILITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jpain.2022.01.004
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Cognitive factors are thought to contribute and maintain pain experiences in young peo-ple. However, most of these factors have been assessed in isolation. Considering more than 1 cogni-tive factor could increase explanatory power and identify multiple targets for intervention. Here, we tested a Combined Cognitive Bias Hypothesis (CCBH) that suggests information-processing factors associate with each other and exert either additive and/or interactive influences on pain outcomes. We conducted secondary analysis of data from 243 adolescents aged 16 to 19 years, who had com-pleted a task measuring pain-related attention control impairments (emotion-priming visual search task) and a task measuring biased interpretations towards threatening cues (Adolescent Interpreta-tion of Bodily Threat task). These young people also completed measures of recent pain experiences and pain catastrophizing, which served as primary and secondary outcomes, respectively. Regression analyses revealed that difficulties with attention control (following presentation of pain-related stim-uli) and tendencies to endorse threatening interpretations of ambiguous situations had significant additive effects on both pain outcomes. However, correlations between these factors were non-sig-nificant. They also did not interact to influence pain outcomes. These findings require replication in broader age ranges and clinical samples but potentially suggest that, measuring multiple cognitive factors increases explanatory power of youth pain outcomes. Perspective: Weak attention control following exposure to pain cues and tendencies to endorse threat interpretations, uniquely and additively associate with self-reported pain experiences and pain catastrophizing in community youth. Measuring several cognitive factors simultaneously could improve our ability to explain pain outcomes in adolescent populations.
引用
收藏
页码:1082 / 1091
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Pain-related worry in patients with chronic orofacial pain
    Davis, C. Ervin
    Stockstill, John W.
    Stanley, William D.
    Wu, Qiang
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION, 2014, 145 (07): : 722 - 730
  • [2] Worry Among Latinx Young Adults: Relations to Pain Experience, Pain-Related Anxiety, and Perceived Health
    Michael J. Zvolensky
    Brooke Y. Kauffman
    Daniel Bogiaizian
    Andres G. Viana
    Jafar Bakhshaie
    Andrew H. Rogers
    Natalia Peraza
    Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, 2019, 6 : 981 - 989
  • [3] Worry Among Latinx Young Adults: Relations to Pain Experience, Pain-Related Anxiety, and Perceived Health
    Zvolensky, Michael J.
    Kauffman, Brooke Y.
    Bogiaizian, Daniel
    Viana, Andres G.
    Bakhshaie, Jafar
    Rogers, Andrew H.
    Peraza, Natalia
    JOURNAL OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC HEALTH DISPARITIES, 2019, 6 (05) : 981 - 989
  • [4] Pain-related catastrophizing in pain patients and people with pain in the general population
    de Boer, M. J.
    Struys, M. M. R. F.
    Versteegen, G. J.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAIN, 2012, 16 (07) : 1044 - 1052
  • [5] Analysis of pain-related vocalization in young pigs
    Marx, G
    Horn, T
    Thielebein, J
    Knubel, B
    von Borell, E
    JOURNAL OF SOUND AND VIBRATION, 2003, 266 (03) : 687 - 698
  • [6] Selective attentional bias for pain-related stimuli amongst pain fearful individuals
    Keogh, E
    Ellery, D
    Hunt, C
    Hannent, I
    PAIN, 2001, 91 (1-2) : 91 - 100
  • [7] REMEDIATION OF PAIN-RELATED MEMORY BIAS AS A RESULT OF RECOVERY FROM CHRONIC PAIN
    EDWARDS, LC
    PEARCE, SA
    BEARD, RW
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH, 1995, 39 (02) : 175 - 181
  • [8] Beliefs underlying pain-related fear and how they evolve: a qualitative investigation in people with chronic back pain and high pain-related fear
    Bunzli, Samantha
    Smith, Anne
    Schuetze, Robert
    O'Sullivan, Peter
    BMJ OPEN, 2015, 5 (10):
  • [9] Health literacy, pain-related interference and pain-related distress of patients with musculoskeletal pain
    Bittencourt, Juliana Valentim
    de Souza, Patrick Anderson Chaves
    Correa, Leticia Amaral
    Volotao, Andresa Narcizo
    Mathieson, Stephanie
    Nogueira, Leandro Alberto Calazans
    HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL, 2023, 38 (04)
  • [10] The influence of pain catastrophizing on pain-related disability: mediating role of pain-related fear
    Matsuoka, H
    Sakano, Y
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH, 2005, 58 (06) : S49 - S49