Stress, Control, and the Fluctuating Experience of Chronic Pain
A study using ecological momentary assessment has shed new light on the dynamic relationship between stress and chronic low back pain. Researchers found that higher stress intensity was strongly associated with increased momentary pain intensity. More specifically, a perceived lack of control over stressors consistently amplified pain, while encountering novel situations was linked to a slight reduction in pain. The research also examined how stress characteristics affect the variability of pain, finding that higher stress levels were associated with more homogeneity in pain ratings across participants.
Why it might matter to you:
This research directly investigates the psychological modulation of pain intensity, a core mechanism underlying placebo and nocebo effects. The finding that specific stress characteristics, like perceived lack of control, have distinct impacts on pain offers a more nuanced target for interventions than general stress reduction. For a neuroscientist developing preclinical models, these human data provide a clear framework for testing how analogous psychological states might be modelled and manipulated in animals to better understand the neurobiology of context-dependent pain modulation.
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