Pediatric pain: interacting behavioral and physical factors

Pain in infants, children, and adolescents warrants study from a developmental, behavioral, and physiological perspective because maturation of physical, emotional, and cognitive systems influences the way in which pain is experienced and expressed. Pediatric pain is an underdeveloped area ripe for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatrics (Evanston) 1992-11, Vol.90 (5 Pt 2), p.816-821
Hauptverfasser: Zeltzer, L K, Barr, R G, McGrath, P A, Schechter, N L
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container_end_page 821
container_issue 5 Pt 2
container_start_page 816
container_title Pediatrics (Evanston)
container_volume 90
creator Zeltzer, L K
Barr, R G
McGrath, P A
Schechter, N L
description Pain in infants, children, and adolescents warrants study from a developmental, behavioral, and physiological perspective because maturation of physical, emotional, and cognitive systems influences the way in which pain is experienced and expressed. Pediatric pain is an underdeveloped area ripe for study within the realm of developmental and behavioral pediatrics, as noted by documentation of its undertreatment in children. The focus of this paper is to present issues relevant to the study of pain in children, using the example of the recurrent abdominal pain syndrome to illustrate points regarding epidemiology, assessment, and intervention. It is the opinion of these authors that pediatric pain must be understood from a developmental perspective in both clinical and nonclinical populations of children. Multidisciplinary approaches to research in pain aids in understanding the development of nociceptive transmission and inhibitory systems, the development of pain expression, and the influence of context on pain experience and behavior. The goal of research in pediatric pain is to understand these systems within a developmental context so that preventive and therapeutic intervention strategies can be developed to reduce children's distress and pain-related disability.
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subjects Abdominal Pain - etiology
Abdominal Pain - physiopathology
Abdominal Pain - psychology
Abdominal pain in children
Child
Child Behavior
Child Development
Humans
Models, Theoretical
Pain - etiology
Pain - physiopathology
Pain - psychology
Pain in children
Pediatric abdominal pain
Pediatric pain
Physiological aspects
Psychological aspects
Recurrence
title Pediatric pain: interacting behavioral and physical factors
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