AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic pain has become a major public health issue, prompting research that primarily examines how care affects pain perception, while studies addressing how emotional factors like anxiety and depression impact pain vigilance are limited.
  • A study involving 52 chronic pain patients used a modified dot-probe task and various self-report measures to analyze the relationships between emotional variables, pain ratings, and age on attentional processes.
  • Findings indicated that higher pain ratings correlated with more mistakes on attention tests, while older age and cognitive anxiety were associated negatively with attention performance, underscoring the need for deeper investigation into how these factors influence pain perception and attentional processes.

Article Abstract

Chronic pain is a serious public health problem that has grown exponentially in recent years, which is why it has received the attention of numerous researchers. Most of the studies in the field of chronic pain have focused on care as a mediating variable on the perception of painful stimuli and emotions. Nevertheless, there are very few studies that have gone in the opposite direction. This study's aim is therefore to analyse the impact of emotional variables (anxiety and depression), the rating of pain, and age on vigilance processes in a sample of patients with chronic pain. To do so, the attentional performance of a cohort of 52 patients with chronic pain was measured through the use of a modified dot-probe task. Furthermore, all the participants were evaluated using the following self-report measures: Beck's Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), the McGill Pain Questionnaire, and the Pain Anxiety Symptoms Scale-20 (PASS-20). Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis revealed a significant negative correlation between the pain rating index and the number of mistakes the participants made during the attention test. There was also a positive and significant correlation with age and another negative and significant correlation with cognitive anxiety regarding the overall performance times during the undertaking of the experimental task. These results point to the importance of a more in-depth understanding of the impact that the emotional variables and other variables such as age have on attentional processes and the rating of pain. Finally, the discussion focuses on the implications these results could have for clinical practice or for future research studies in this field.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7201847PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/3204720DOI Listing

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