The interaction between stress and chronic pain through the lens of threat learning

•Stress and pain are interleaved, interact and influence each other.•Threat learning is a major contributing factor in chronic pain.•Cortisol has a pronounced effect on learning, biasing towards threat information.•We argue that threat learning mediates the relation between stress and chronic pain....

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2019-12, Vol.107, p.641-655
Hauptverfasser: Timmers, Inge, Quaedflieg, Conny W.E.M., Hsu, Connie, Heathcote, Lauren C., Rovnaghi, Cynthia R., Simons, Laura E.
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container_issue
container_start_page 641
container_title Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
container_volume 107
creator Timmers, Inge
Quaedflieg, Conny W.E.M.
Hsu, Connie
Heathcote, Lauren C.
Rovnaghi, Cynthia R.
Simons, Laura E.
description •Stress and pain are interleaved, interact and influence each other.•Threat learning is a major contributing factor in chronic pain.•Cortisol has a pronounced effect on learning, biasing towards threat information.•We argue that threat learning mediates the relation between stress and chronic pain. Stress and pain are interleaved at multiple levels - interacting and influencing each other. Both are modulated by psychosocial factors including fears, beliefs, and goals, and are served by overlapping neural substrates. One major contributing factor in the development and maintenance of chronic pain is threat learning, with pain as an emotionally-salient threat – or stressor. Here, we argue that threat learning is a central mechanism and contributor, mediating the relationship between stress and chronic pain. We review the state of the art on (mal)adaptive learning in chronic pain, and on effects of stress and particularly cortisol on learning. We then provide a theoretical integration of how stress may affect chronic pain through its effect on threat learning. Prolonged stress, as may be experienced by patients with chronic pain, and its resulting changes in key brain networks modulating stress responses and threat learning, may further exacerbate these impairing effects on threat learning. We provide testable hypotheses and suggestions for how this integration may guide future research and clinical approaches in chronic pain.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2019.10.007
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Chronic pain
Cortisol
Fear avoidance model
HPA axis
Learning and memory
Pain
Stress
Threat learning
title The interaction between stress and chronic pain through the lens of threat learning
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