Vulnerable Dispositional Traits and Chronic Pain: Predisposing but not Predetermining

•Dispositional traits protect or increase vulnerability in individuals with chronic pain.•Two measures of dispositions traits were investigated: affect balance style and multiple domain traits.•Affect balance style and multi-domain traits were associated with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, an...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of pain 2022-04, Vol.23 (4), p.693-705
Hauptverfasser: Sambuco, Nicola, Mickle, Angela M., Garvan, Cynthia, Cardoso, Josue, Johnson, Alisa J., Kusko, Daniel A., Addison, Adriana, Glover, Toni L., Staud, Roland, Redden, David, Goodin, Burel, Fillingim, Roger B., Sibille, Kimberly T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Dispositional traits protect or increase vulnerability in individuals with chronic pain.•Two measures of dispositions traits were investigated: affect balance style and multiple domain traits.•Affect balance style and multi-domain traits were associated with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, and functioning at baseline.•Only multi-domain traits were associated with the clinical pain measures at two-years.•Individuals with vulnerable traits at baseline showed more variability prospectively. Dispositional traits can be protective or contribute to increased vulnerability in individuals with chronic pain. This study aims to evaluate the association between two dispositional trait measures, affect balance style and multi-domain trait groups, with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, functional pain, and experimental pain at two years in individuals with chronic knee pain. The study is a prospective analysis of 168 community dwelling individuals aged 45 to 85 years old with knee pain with or at risk for knee osteoarthritis. At baseline, affect balance style and multi-domain trait groups were associated with psychosocial measures, clinical pain, and functional status. At the two-year time point, the multi-domain trait groups were associated with the clinical pain measures. Interestingly, individuals with previously demonstrated vulnerable traits showed more variability in dispositional trait status at the two-year time point compared to those with dispositional traits previously demonstrated as more protective. Findings reiterate that dispositional traits are predisposing but are not predetermining regarding pain-related experiences. Vulnerable and protective dispositional traits are positively and negatively associated with clinical pain and functional limitations respectively. Although considered relatively stable, a 30-50% shift in dispositional traits was indicated over a two-year period. Findings highlight that dispositional trait are modifiable and thus, predisposing but not predetermining for persisting chronic pain.
ISSN:1526-5900
1528-8447
1528-8447
DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2021.11.007