Psychological predictors of pain expression and activity intolerance in chronic pain patients.

Pain

Department of Psychology, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Sherbrooke, Canada Department of Community Health Sciences, Université de Sherbrooke, Canada Department of Anesthesiology, McGill University, Canada Department of Psychology, McGill University, 1205 Docteur Penfield, Montreal, Que., Canada H3A 1B1.

Published: September 2008

Recent research suggests that communicative and protective pain behaviors represent functionally distinct subsystems of behavior associated with pain. The present research examined whether components of pain experience such as pain severity, catastrophizing and fear of pain were differentially associated with communicative and protective pain behaviors. It was predicted that pain severity would be associated with decreased physical tolerance and heightened expression of pain behavior. It was also predicted that pain catastrophizing would be preferentially associated with communicative pain behaviors, and fear of pain would be preferentially associated with protective pain behaviors and decreased physical tolerance. To test these predictions, work-disabled patients with musculoskeletal pain conditions (N=72) were filmed as they participated in a simulated occupational lifting task. Multiple regressions revealed that pain severity was uniquely associated with decreased physical tolerance and increased expression of protective pain behaviors. Pain catastrophizing was uniquely associated with the expression of both communicative and protective pain behaviors. Fear of pain was associated with physical tolerance and protective pain behaviors but not when controlling for pain severity. This study provides additional evidence for the functional distinctiveness of different types of pain expression and provides preliminary evidence for the functional distinctiveness of pain expression and activity intolerance. Discussion addresses the processes by which psychological factors might influence the display of different types of pain behaviors. Discussion also addresses how different types of interventions might be required to specifically target the sensory and behavioral dimensions of the pain system.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pain.2008.02.029DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pain behaviors
32
pain
26
protective pain
24
pain severity
16
physical tolerance
16
pain expression
12
communicative protective
12
fear pain
12
decreased physical
12
expression activity
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!