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Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain

BACKGROUND: Depression, anxiety and chronic pain are frequent co-occurrent disorders. Patients with these mental disorders experience more intense pain that lasts for a longer time. METHOD: Questionnaire with 228 variables was applied to 109 randomly chosen patients that were treated at an outpatien...

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Autores principales: RUS MAKOVEC, Maja, VINTAR, Neli, MAKOVEC, Samo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: De Gruyter Open 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4820143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27646616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/sjph-2015-0001
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author RUS MAKOVEC, Maja
VINTAR, Neli
MAKOVEC, Samo
author_facet RUS MAKOVEC, Maja
VINTAR, Neli
MAKOVEC, Samo
author_sort RUS MAKOVEC, Maja
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depression, anxiety and chronic pain are frequent co-occurrent disorders. Patients with these mental disorders experience more intense pain that lasts for a longer time. METHOD: Questionnaire with 228 variables was applied to 109 randomly chosen patients that were treated at an outpatient clinic for treatment of chronic pain of the University Clinical Centre Ljubljana from March to June 2013. 87 patients responded to the questionnaire (79.8%). Location of pain considering diagnosis was the criterion in the discriminant analysis (soft tissue disorders; headache; symptoms not elsewhere classified; back pain) and following summative scores as predictors: level of depression and anxiety (The Zung Self-Rating Depression/Anxiety Scale), evaluation of pain and perceptions of being threatened in social relations. RESULTS: Average age of participants was M = 52.7 years (SD 13.9), with 70.9% female, 29.1% male participants. 63% of respondents achieved clinically important level of depression and 54% clinically important level of anxiety. On univariate level, the highest level of depression and anxiety was found for back pain and the lowest for headache. No significant difference was found in evaluation of pain and perceptions of being threatened in social relations regarding location of pain. Self-evaluation of depression has, in the framework of discriminant analysis, the largest weight for prediction of differentiation between different locations of pain. CONCLUSION: Different locations of pain have different connections with mood levels. The results of research on a preliminary level indicate the need to consider mental experience in the treatment of chronic pain.
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spelling pubmed-48201432016-04-20 Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain RUS MAKOVEC, Maja VINTAR, Neli MAKOVEC, Samo Zdr Varst Original Scientific Article BACKGROUND: Depression, anxiety and chronic pain are frequent co-occurrent disorders. Patients with these mental disorders experience more intense pain that lasts for a longer time. METHOD: Questionnaire with 228 variables was applied to 109 randomly chosen patients that were treated at an outpatient clinic for treatment of chronic pain of the University Clinical Centre Ljubljana from March to June 2013. 87 patients responded to the questionnaire (79.8%). Location of pain considering diagnosis was the criterion in the discriminant analysis (soft tissue disorders; headache; symptoms not elsewhere classified; back pain) and following summative scores as predictors: level of depression and anxiety (The Zung Self-Rating Depression/Anxiety Scale), evaluation of pain and perceptions of being threatened in social relations. RESULTS: Average age of participants was M = 52.7 years (SD 13.9), with 70.9% female, 29.1% male participants. 63% of respondents achieved clinically important level of depression and 54% clinically important level of anxiety. On univariate level, the highest level of depression and anxiety was found for back pain and the lowest for headache. No significant difference was found in evaluation of pain and perceptions of being threatened in social relations regarding location of pain. Self-evaluation of depression has, in the framework of discriminant analysis, the largest weight for prediction of differentiation between different locations of pain. CONCLUSION: Different locations of pain have different connections with mood levels. The results of research on a preliminary level indicate the need to consider mental experience in the treatment of chronic pain. De Gruyter Open 2014-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4820143/ /pubmed/27646616 http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/sjph-2015-0001 Text en © National Institution of Public Health, Slovenia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).
spellingShingle Original Scientific Article
RUS MAKOVEC, Maja
VINTAR, Neli
MAKOVEC, Samo
Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title_full Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title_fullStr Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title_full_unstemmed Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title_short Self – Reported Depression, Anxiety and Evaluation of Own Pain in Clinical Sample of Patients with Different Location of Chronic Pain
title_sort self – reported depression, anxiety and evaluation of own pain in clinical sample of patients with different location of chronic pain
topic Original Scientific Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4820143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27646616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/sjph-2015-0001
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