Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain

Standard

Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain. / Bustan, S; Gonzalez-Roldan, A M; Kamping, S; Brunner, M; Löffler, M; Flor, H; Anton, F.

In: EUR J PAIN, Vol. 19, No. 7, 08.2015, p. 1035-48.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bustan, S, Gonzalez-Roldan, AM, Kamping, S, Brunner, M, Löffler, M, Flor, H & Anton, F 2015, 'Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain', EUR J PAIN, vol. 19, no. 7, pp. 1035-48. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.709

APA

Bustan, S., Gonzalez-Roldan, A. M., Kamping, S., Brunner, M., Löffler, M., Flor, H., & Anton, F. (2015). Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain. EUR J PAIN, 19(7), 1035-48. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.709

Vancouver

Bustan S, Gonzalez-Roldan AM, Kamping S, Brunner M, Löffler M, Flor H et al. Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain. EUR J PAIN. 2015 Aug;19(7):1035-48. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.709

Bibtex

@article{761a1503403147aeacf5d8def26e92a3,
title = "Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Pain has consistently been viewed as containing two dimensions, a sensory (intensity) and an emotional (unpleasantness). It has been suggested that pain involves higher order cognitive processes that go beyond unpleasantness. We therefore aimed at extending the assessment of pain by introducing an additional dimension of pain-related suffering and identifying noxious stimulation protocols that are most adequate for its psychophysical and psychophysiological characterization.METHODS: Twenty-four healthy volunteers received separate series of tonic and phasic noxious mechanical stimuli. Visual analogue scales were used to rate intensity, unpleasantness and suffering and psychophysiological measurements such as heart rate, skin conductance and corrugator electromyography were recorded. Acoustically evoked startle responses were measured in part of the assessments to obtain additional indicators of pain aversiveness.RESULTS: Spearman's correlation coefficients and partial correlations analyses as well as principal component analyses confirmed that suffering constitutes an integral component of pain processing that is distinct from intensity and unpleasantness. Tonic, rather than phasic, stimulation method was more effective in eliciting pain and suffering and under this condition startle responses where higher during long compared to short stimuli.CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that in acute pain, suffering is a constitutive dimension that might even be more crucial in clinical states of pain.",
author = "S Bustan and Gonzalez-Roldan, {A M} and S Kamping and M Brunner and M L{\"o}ffler and H Flor and F Anton",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2015 European Pain Federation - EFIC{\textregistered}",
year = "2015",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1002/ejp.709",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "1035--48",
journal = "EUR J PAIN",
issn = "1090-3801",
publisher = "W.B. Saunders Ltd",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Suffering as an independent component of the experience of pain

AU - Bustan, S

AU - Gonzalez-Roldan, A M

AU - Kamping, S

AU - Brunner, M

AU - Löffler, M

AU - Flor, H

AU - Anton, F

N1 - © 2015 European Pain Federation - EFIC®

PY - 2015/8

Y1 - 2015/8

N2 - BACKGROUND: Pain has consistently been viewed as containing two dimensions, a sensory (intensity) and an emotional (unpleasantness). It has been suggested that pain involves higher order cognitive processes that go beyond unpleasantness. We therefore aimed at extending the assessment of pain by introducing an additional dimension of pain-related suffering and identifying noxious stimulation protocols that are most adequate for its psychophysical and psychophysiological characterization.METHODS: Twenty-four healthy volunteers received separate series of tonic and phasic noxious mechanical stimuli. Visual analogue scales were used to rate intensity, unpleasantness and suffering and psychophysiological measurements such as heart rate, skin conductance and corrugator electromyography were recorded. Acoustically evoked startle responses were measured in part of the assessments to obtain additional indicators of pain aversiveness.RESULTS: Spearman's correlation coefficients and partial correlations analyses as well as principal component analyses confirmed that suffering constitutes an integral component of pain processing that is distinct from intensity and unpleasantness. Tonic, rather than phasic, stimulation method was more effective in eliciting pain and suffering and under this condition startle responses where higher during long compared to short stimuli.CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that in acute pain, suffering is a constitutive dimension that might even be more crucial in clinical states of pain.

AB - BACKGROUND: Pain has consistently been viewed as containing two dimensions, a sensory (intensity) and an emotional (unpleasantness). It has been suggested that pain involves higher order cognitive processes that go beyond unpleasantness. We therefore aimed at extending the assessment of pain by introducing an additional dimension of pain-related suffering and identifying noxious stimulation protocols that are most adequate for its psychophysical and psychophysiological characterization.METHODS: Twenty-four healthy volunteers received separate series of tonic and phasic noxious mechanical stimuli. Visual analogue scales were used to rate intensity, unpleasantness and suffering and psychophysiological measurements such as heart rate, skin conductance and corrugator electromyography were recorded. Acoustically evoked startle responses were measured in part of the assessments to obtain additional indicators of pain aversiveness.RESULTS: Spearman's correlation coefficients and partial correlations analyses as well as principal component analyses confirmed that suffering constitutes an integral component of pain processing that is distinct from intensity and unpleasantness. Tonic, rather than phasic, stimulation method was more effective in eliciting pain and suffering and under this condition startle responses where higher during long compared to short stimuli.CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that in acute pain, suffering is a constitutive dimension that might even be more crucial in clinical states of pain.

U2 - 10.1002/ejp.709

DO - 10.1002/ejp.709

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25857478

VL - 19

SP - 1035

EP - 1048

JO - EUR J PAIN

JF - EUR J PAIN

SN - 1090-3801

IS - 7

ER -