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En Pointe: Dancers Report Their Pain Less Variably Than Do Controls. | LitMetric

En Pointe: Dancers Report Their Pain Less Variably Than Do Controls.

J Pain

The Clinical Pain Innovation Lab, The Cheryl Spencer Department of Nursing, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa, Israel. Electronic address:

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how professional dancers may report pain more consistently than non-dancers, indicating their training enhances awareness of bodily sensations.
  • The assessment involved 33 dancers and 33 matched controls, using the focused analgesia selection test (FAST) to measure variability in pain reports.
  • Results showed dancers had significantly less variability in pain reporting (P = .013) and that years of practice correlated positively with consistent pain reporting, suggesting that training can improve subjective pain assessments for better clinical outcomes.

Article Abstract

The subjective nature of pain and the lack of a gold standard for objective measurement hinders effective assessment, diagnosis, and treatment. Some individuals, such as professional dancers, are better in assessing and reporting bodily sensations. This observational study aimed to assess whether dancers report their pain less variably, than other people do. After consenting, subjects completed the focused analgesia selection test (FAST), which assesses subjects' variability of pain reports. FAST outcomes, ICC and R reflect the magnitude of variability of pain reports observed. In addition, subjects underwent a taste task, which similarly assesses variability of tastes (salty and sweet) intensity reports and completed the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness questionnaire. Thirty-three professional dancers and 33 healthy aged-matched controls were recruited. The dancers exhibited less variability of pain reports then controls (P = .013), but not in case of tastes-reports. Years of practice was positively correlated with pain reporting variability (r = .447, P = .009, and r = .380, P = .029; for FAST ICC and R, respectively). Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness subscores correlated with pain reporting variability: R and ICC with emotional awareness (r = .260, P = .040, and r = .274, P = .030, respectively), and R with trusting [r = .254, P = .044]). PERSPECTIVE: The difference between dancers and controls in the magnitude of variability of pain reports is probably due to the dancers' extensive training, which focuses on attention to body signals. Our results suggest that training can improve subjective pain reports, which are essential for quality clinical care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2020.06.005DOI Listing

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