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Sensory, Affective, and Catastrophizing Reactions to Multiple Stimulus Modalities: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

Authors :
Samuel P. Herbig
Lucinda Chee
Kathryn A. Thompson
Jessica M. Fisher
Y. Güereca
J. Shadlow
Tyler A. Toledo
Heather B. Coleman
Natalie Hellman
Ky'Lee B. Barnoski
C. Sturycz
E. Lannon
Jamie L. Rhudy
Bethany L. Kuhn
M. Payne
Shreela Palit
Source :
J Pain
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Native Americans (NAs) have a higher prevalence of chronic pain than any other U.S. racial/ethnic group; however, little is known about the mechanisms for this pain disparity. This study used quantitative sensory testing to assess pain experience in healthy, pain-free adults (n = 137 NAs (87 female), n = 145 non-Hispanic whites (NHW; 68 female)) after painful electric, heat, cold, ischemic, and pressure stimuli. After each stimulus, ratings of pain intensity, sensory pain, affective pain, pain-related anxiety, and situation-specific pain catastrophizing were assessed. The results suggested that NAs reported greater sensory pain in response to suprathreshold electric and heat stimuli, greater pain-related anxiety to heat and ischemic stimuli, and more catastrophic thoughts in response to electric and heat stimuli. Sex differences were also noted; however, with the exception of catastrophic thoughts to cold, these finding were not moderated by race/ethnicity. Together, findings suggest NAs experience heightened sensory, anxiety, and catastrophizing reactions to painful stimuli. This could place NAs at risk for future chronic pain and could ultimately lead to a vicious cycle that maintains pain (eg, pain → anxiety/catastrophizing → pain). Perspective NAs experienced heightened sensory, anxiety, and catastrophizing reactions in response to multiple pain stimuli. Given the potential for anxiety and catastrophic thoughts to amplify pain, this characteristic may place them at risk for pain disorders and could lead to a vicious cycle that maintains pain.

Details

ISSN :
15265900
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4456ad72cf29b8e6a83a7362430baba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2019.02.009