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Mere Intention to Perform Painful Movements Elicits Fear of Movement-Related Pain: An Experimental Study on Fear Acquisition Beyond Actual Movements

Authors :
Ann Meulders
Johan W.S. Vlaeyen
Clinical Psychological Science
RS: FPN CPS I
Source :
The Journal of Pain, 14(4), 412-423. Churchill Livingstone
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Fresh empirical evidence supports the notion that fear of movement-related pain can be acquired through associative learning. In the context of these findings, 2 ideas are appealing, yet uninvestigated. The first is that merely the intention to perform a painful movement acts as a covert conditioned stimulus (CS) inducing defensive fear responses (ie, gaining excitatory properties following Pavlovian acquisition). The second idea is that after extinction, fear of movement-related pain can easily be reinstated after unexpected painful stimuli (ie, reinstatement). In a voluntary differential conditioning movement paradigm with movements as CSs and a painful electrocutaneous stimulus as the unconditioned stimulus (pain-US), 2 groups were included (Experimental/Control). One movement (CS+) was followed by the pain-US and another movement (CS) was not during acquisition, while the CS+ was no longer reinforced during extinction. Next, the Experimental group received 2 reinstating pain-USs, whereas the Control group did not. The CS+ but not the CS evoked fear of movement-related pain in self-reports and eye-blink startles. Intriguingly, the mere intention to perform the painful movement produced higher eye-blink startle responses than the intention to perform the nonpainful movement. We also demonstrated nondifferential reinstatement in the verbal fear ratings in the Experimental group only. Perspective: This study demonstrates that the mere intention to perform a painful movement prior to the actual painful movement itself can come to elicit conditioned fear responses. These results suggest that actual movement may not be necessary to elicit pain-related fear responses, maintaining chronic pain-related fear, avoidance, and disability. (C) 2013 by the American Pain Society

Details

ISSN :
15265900
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6dcfefa2ef0d98450e1ea1b44cba59f3