Association of pain catastrophizing with labor pain and analgesia consumption in obstetrical patients

•Pain catastrophizing is associated with the fear of overwhelming labor pain.•Its association with pain, analgesic use, and maternal recovery is unknown.•High catastrophizers reported greater pain when requesting labor analgesia.•They did not have higher labor and postpartum pain or analgesic use.•T...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of obstetric anesthesia 2024-02, Vol.57, p.103954-103954, Article 103954
Hauptverfasser: Peralta, F.M., Condon, L.P., Torrez, D., Neumann, K.E., Pollet, A.L., McCarthy, R.J.
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container_start_page 103954
container_title International journal of obstetric anesthesia
container_volume 57
creator Peralta, F.M.
Condon, L.P.
Torrez, D.
Neumann, K.E.
Pollet, A.L.
McCarthy, R.J.
description •Pain catastrophizing is associated with the fear of overwhelming labor pain.•Its association with pain, analgesic use, and maternal recovery is unknown.•High catastrophizers reported greater pain when requesting labor analgesia.•They did not have higher labor and postpartum pain or analgesic use.•They did report feeling less comfort, ability to mobilize and control at discharge. Pain catastrophizing is an exaggerated negative orientation to painful stimuli which in obstetric patients is associated with fear of overwhelming labor pain and negative pain-related outcomes. This study aimed to quantitatively examine the association of pain catastrophizing with maternal labor pain outcomes. We conducted a prospective observational study of women admitted for a vaginal trial of labor. Subjects completed the 13-item Pain Catastrophizing scale (PCS) questionnaire (scored 0 to 52, higher scores representing greater catastrophizing). Pain was assessed at baseline and at request for neuraxial labor analgesia. Labor and postpartum pain intensity was assessed as the average area under the pain intensity by time curve. Pain at request for analgesia, labor pain, postpartum pain, analgesic consumption, and quality of recovery was compared between high (PCS ≥ 17) and low catastrophizing groups. Data from 138/157 (88%) subjects were included in the analysis. Median (IQR) pain scores at request for analgesia were 9 (8,10) and 8 (6,9), a difference of 1 (95% CI 0 to 2.5, P = 0.008) in high-catastrophizing and in low-catastrophizing groups, respectively. Adjusted pain during labor, postpartum pain and opioid analgesic use were not significantly different. High-catastrophizers reported less comfort, ability to mobilize and less control during hospitalization. Post-discharge there were no differences in pain or analgesic use. We did not observe greater labor or post-delivery pain or increased analgesic use in high-catastrophizing parturients. High catastrophizers reported greater pain when requesting analgesia, which is consistent with the role of catastrophizing in intensifying the experience of pain.
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Pain catastrophizing is an exaggerated negative orientation to painful stimuli which in obstetric patients is associated with fear of overwhelming labor pain and negative pain-related outcomes. This study aimed to quantitatively examine the association of pain catastrophizing with maternal labor pain outcomes. We conducted a prospective observational study of women admitted for a vaginal trial of labor. Subjects completed the 13-item Pain Catastrophizing scale (PCS) questionnaire (scored 0 to 52, higher scores representing greater catastrophizing). Pain was assessed at baseline and at request for neuraxial labor analgesia. Labor and postpartum pain intensity was assessed as the average area under the pain intensity by time curve. Pain at request for analgesia, labor pain, postpartum pain, analgesic consumption, and quality of recovery was compared between high (PCS ≥ 17) and low catastrophizing groups. Data from 138/157 (88%) subjects were included in the analysis. Median (IQR) pain scores at request for analgesia were 9 (8,10) and 8 (6,9), a difference of 1 (95% CI 0 to 2.5, P = 0.008) in high-catastrophizing and in low-catastrophizing groups, respectively. Adjusted pain during labor, postpartum pain and opioid analgesic use were not significantly different. High-catastrophizers reported less comfort, ability to mobilize and less control during hospitalization. Post-discharge there were no differences in pain or analgesic use. We did not observe greater labor or post-delivery pain or increased analgesic use in high-catastrophizing parturients. 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Pain catastrophizing is an exaggerated negative orientation to painful stimuli which in obstetric patients is associated with fear of overwhelming labor pain and negative pain-related outcomes. This study aimed to quantitatively examine the association of pain catastrophizing with maternal labor pain outcomes. We conducted a prospective observational study of women admitted for a vaginal trial of labor. Subjects completed the 13-item Pain Catastrophizing scale (PCS) questionnaire (scored 0 to 52, higher scores representing greater catastrophizing). Pain was assessed at baseline and at request for neuraxial labor analgesia. Labor and postpartum pain intensity was assessed as the average area under the pain intensity by time curve. Pain at request for analgesia, labor pain, postpartum pain, analgesic consumption, and quality of recovery was compared between high (PCS ≥ 17) and low catastrophizing groups. Data from 138/157 (88%) subjects were included in the analysis. 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subjects Analgesic consumption
Labor analgesia
Maternal outcomes
Pain catastrophizing
title Association of pain catastrophizing with labor pain and analgesia consumption in obstetrical patients
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