Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain

Clinicians often encounter patients who present with both chronic pain and elevated levels of anxiety. In some cases, the source of the anxiety is vague and diffuse. For others, there is an identifiable precipitating object, event or situation. For example, some patients with chronic pain are able t...

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Main Author: Gordon JG Asmundson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2002-01-01
Series:Pain Research and Management
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/321804
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spelling doaj-022683439b5f4eaab7443f360315ceab2020-11-24T20:51:33ZengHindawi LimitedPain Research and Management1203-67652002-01-01717810.1155/2002/321804Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic PainGordon JG AsmundsonClinicians often encounter patients who present with both chronic pain and elevated levels of anxiety. In some cases, the source of the anxiety is vague and diffuse. For others, there is an identifiable precipitating object, event or situation. For example, some patients with chronic pain are able to attribute their anxiety to the possibility of not regaining lost functional abilities, financial difficulties, feelings of social inadequacy, or uncertainty about the meaning and consequences of pain. The association between chronic pain and anxiety may not be particularly surprising when one considers that, in the acute phase, both pain and target-oriented anxiety (or fear) motivate actions that serve to minimize the threat and maximize the likelihood of successful escape. As well, their neurobiology, while distinct, interacts in the reticular system (1). Evaluations of the association between chronic pain and fear-relevant constructs were initiated in the 1960s and 1970s (2,3). It has only been of late, however, that theorists and researchers have begun to focus their attention on delineating the precise nature of the relationship and its specific implications for the assessment and management of pain.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/321804
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gordon JG Asmundson
spellingShingle Gordon JG Asmundson
Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
Pain Research and Management
author_facet Gordon JG Asmundson
author_sort Gordon JG Asmundson
title Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
title_short Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
title_full Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
title_fullStr Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
title_full_unstemmed Anxiety and Related Factors in Chronic Pain
title_sort anxiety and related factors in chronic pain
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Pain Research and Management
issn 1203-6765
publishDate 2002-01-01
description Clinicians often encounter patients who present with both chronic pain and elevated levels of anxiety. In some cases, the source of the anxiety is vague and diffuse. For others, there is an identifiable precipitating object, event or situation. For example, some patients with chronic pain are able to attribute their anxiety to the possibility of not regaining lost functional abilities, financial difficulties, feelings of social inadequacy, or uncertainty about the meaning and consequences of pain. The association between chronic pain and anxiety may not be particularly surprising when one considers that, in the acute phase, both pain and target-oriented anxiety (or fear) motivate actions that serve to minimize the threat and maximize the likelihood of successful escape. As well, their neurobiology, while distinct, interacts in the reticular system (1). Evaluations of the association between chronic pain and fear-relevant constructs were initiated in the 1960s and 1970s (2,3). It has only been of late, however, that theorists and researchers have begun to focus their attention on delineating the precise nature of the relationship and its specific implications for the assessment and management of pain.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/321804
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