1. Pain threshold reflects psychological traits in patients with chronic pain: a cross-sectional study
- Author
-
Sadanobu Kawashima, Ikumi Ban, Tadashi Kiba, Kenji Kanbara, Fumie Kato, Yasuyuki Mizuno, Mikihiko Fukunaga, Yukie Saka, and Tetsuya Abe
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Pain tolerance ,Chronic pain ,Quantitative sensory testing ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory ,030202 anesthesiology ,Threshold of pain ,medicine ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,General Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,High sensitivity ,Research ,Central sensitization ,medicine.disease ,Neuroticism ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,McGill Pain Questionnaire ,Physical therapy ,Pain catastrophizing ,Pain tolerance threshold ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Chronic pain enhances sensory sensitivity and induces the biased development of psychological traits such as depression and pain catastrophizing, leading to the formation of heterogeneous conditions. Fluctuations in the sensory-related thresholds of non-injured sites (with normal peripheral tissue) in patients with chronic pain are thought to be related to central sensitization. The objectives of this study were to analyze the association between pain tolerance thresholds (PTTs) in non-injured sites and the psychological traits of patients with chronic pain and to evaluate the usefulness of PTT measures in assessments of pathological conditions related to chronic pain. Methods This study included 57 patients with chronic pain. The PTTs were measured in non-injured sites with quantitative sensory testing (QST) with electrical stimulation and then classified with cluster analysis. The Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire was used to subjectively assess pain in the injured sites. The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) was used to assess the patients’ psychological traits. Results Based on the cluster analysis of PTTs, the patients were classified into a High-Sensitivity group and an Others group consisting of the remaining patients. The results of the MMPI profiles showed that the High-Sensitivity group included significantly more patients with the Neurotic Triad pattern and no patients with the Conversion V pattern. The scores of the hypochondriasis and hysteria scales were significantly lower in the High-Sensitivity group than in the Others group. Conclusions This study indicated that patients with chronic pain can be classified according to PTTs in non-injured sites and suggests that patients with High-Sensitivity have characteristic psychological traits. Assessment of PTTs in non-injured sites would be useful for evaluating the psychological condition of patients with chronic pain.
- Published
- 2016