Explaining very early acute mild traumatic brain injury after motor vehicle collision pain variability: additive value of pain sensitivity questionnaire

被引:7
|
作者
Kuperman, Pora [1 ]
Granovsky, Yelena [1 ]
Bahouth, Hany [2 ]
Fadel, Shiri [1 ]
Ben Lulu, Hen [2 ]
Bosak, Noam [3 ]
Buxbaum, Chen [3 ]
Sprecher, Elliot [3 ]
Crystal, Shoshana [1 ]
Granot, Michal [4 ]
机构
[1] Technion Israel Inst Technol, Fac Med, Haifa, Israel
[2] Rambam Hlth Care Campus, Trauma & Emergency Surg, Haifa, Israel
[3] Rambam Hlth Care Campus, Dept Neurol, Haifa, Israel
[4] Univ Haifa, Fac Welf & Hlth Sci, IL-31905 Haifa, Israel
关键词
Mild traumatic brain injury; Pain; Quantitative sensory testing; Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire; Motor vehicle collision; POSTOPERATIVE PAIN; MODULATION; PREDICTION; VALIDATION; EXPERIENCE; INTENSITY; ANXIETY;
D O I
10.1097/PR9.0000000000000821
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Introduction and Objectives:Chronic pain is a common postcollision consequence. Wherein, a clearer understanding of acute pain can help stem the acute-to-chronic pain transition. However, the variability of acute pain is only partially explained by psychophysical pain characteristics as measured by quantitative sensory testing. The Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire (PSQ) may reflect inherent psychocognitive representations of patient's sensitivity and thus may reveal less-explored pain dimensions. In the vein of the biopsychosocial approach, this study aimed to explore whether PSQ holds additive value in explaining head and neck pain reports in very early acute-stage mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) after collision, above the use of psychophysical assessment.Methods:Study cohort (n = 130) consisted of mTBI patients (age range 19-66, 57 F) after accident with area-of-injury pain of at least 20 on the day of testing (mean pain 58.4 21.6, range 20-100 Numerical Pain Scale) who underwent clinical, psychophysical, and pain-related psychological assessment within 72-hour after injury.Results:Pain Sensitivity Questionnaire scores were significantly correlated with acute clinical, psychophysical, and pain-related psychological measures. Regression model (R-2 = 0.241, P < 0.001) showed that, together, age, sex, high PSQ, enhanced temporal summation, and less-efficient conditioned pain modulation explained head and neck pain variance. This model demonstrated that the strongest contribution to degree of postinjury pain was independently explained by PSQ (<ss> = 0.32) and then pressure pain threshold-conditioned pain modulation (ss = -0.25).Conclusion:Appraisal of cognitive daily-pain representations, by way of memory and imagination, provides an additional important dispositional facet to explain the variability in the acute mTBI postcollision clinical pain experience, above assessing nociceptive responsiveness to experimentally induced pain.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 47 条
  • [1] Missed Emergency Department Diagnosis of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Patients with Chronic Pain After Motor Vehicle Collision
    Peixoto, Cayden
    Buchanan, Derrick Matthew
    Nahas, Richard
    PAIN PHYSICIAN, 2023, 26 (01) : 101 - 110
  • [2] Structural brain connectivity predicts early acute pain after mild traumatic brain injury
    Branco, Paulo
    Bosak, Noam
    Bielefeld, Jannis
    Cong, Olivia
    Granovsky, Yelena
    Kahn, Itamar
    Yarnitsky, David
    Apkarian, A. Vania
    PAIN, 2023, 164 (06) : 1312 - 1320
  • [3] Early Cortical Thickness Change after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury following Motor Vehicle Collision
    Wang, Xin
    Xie, Hong
    Cotton, Andrew S.
    Tamburrino, Marijo B.
    Brickman, Kristopher R.
    Lewis, Terrence J.
    McLean, Samuel A.
    Liberzon, Israel
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2015, 32 (07) : 455 - 463
  • [4] Early Changes in Cortical Emotion Processing Circuits after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury from Motor Vehicle Collision
    Wang, Xin
    Xie, Hong
    Cotton, Andrew S.
    Brickman, Kristopher R.
    Lewis, Terrence J.
    Wall, John T.
    Tamburrino, Marijo B.
    Bauer, William R.
    Law, Kenny
    McLean, Samuel A.
    Liberzon, Israel
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2017, 34 (02) : 273 - 280
  • [5] Effects of mild traumatic brain injury on thermal pain sensitivity in the rat
    Rodrigues, AC
    Baker, BJ
    Jarvis, A
    Vierck, CJ
    Mauderli, AP
    Yezierski, RP
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2003, 20 (10) : 1072 - 1072
  • [6] Brain Connectivity Predicts Chronic Pain in Acute Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
    Bosak, Noam
    Branco, Paulo
    Kuperman, Pora
    Buxbaum, Chen
    Cohen, Ruth Manor
    Fadel, Shiri
    Zubeidat, Rabab
    Hadad, Rafi
    Lawen, Amir
    Saadon-Grosman, Noam
    Sterling, Michele
    Granovsky, Yelena
    Apkarian, Apkar Vania
    Yarnitsky, David
    Kahn, Itamar
    ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2022, 92 (05) : 819 - 833
  • [7] Pain Catastrophizing Correlates with Early Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Outcome
    Chaput, Genevieve
    Lajoie, Susanne P.
    Naismith, Laura M.
    Lavigne, Gilles
    PAIN RESEARCH & MANAGEMENT, 2016, 2016
  • [8] The Influence of Pain on Cerebral Functioning after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
    Gosselin, Nadia
    Chen, Jen-Kai
    Bottari, Carolina
    Petrides, Michael
    Jubault, Thomas
    Tinawi, Simon
    de Guise, Elaine
    Ptito, Alain
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2012, 29 (17) : 2625 - 2634
  • [9] Racial differences in presentations and predictors of acute pain after motor vehicle collision
    Beaudoin, Francesca L.
    Gutman, Roee
    Zhai, Wanting
    Merchant, Roland C.
    Clark, Melissa A.
    Bollen, Kenneth A.
    Hendry, Phyllis
    Kurz, Michael C.
    Lewandowski, Christopher
    Pearson, Claire
    O'Neil, Brian
    Datner, Elizabeth
    Mitchell, Patricia
    Domeier, Robert
    McLean, Samuel A.
    PAIN, 2018, 159 (06) : 1056 - 1063
  • [10] Motor vehicle collision characteristics and hospitalization outcomes associated with mild traumatic brain injury and concomitant whiplash injury
    Vattipally, Vikas N.
    -Levine, Carly Weber
    Jiang, Kelly
    Bhimreddy, Meghana
    Kramer, Patrick
    Davidar, A. Daniel
    Hersh, Andrew M.
    Winkle, Malcolm
    Byrne, James P.
    Azad, Tej D.
    Theodore, Nicholas
    NEUROSURGICAL FOCUS, 2024, 57 (01)