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Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals

Early palliative/supportive care (ePSC) is a medical intervention focused on patient’s needs, that integrates standard oncological treatment, shortly after a diagnosis of advanced/metastatic cancer. ePSC improves the appropriate management of cancer pain. Understanding the semantic and emotional imp...

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Autores principales: Borelli, Eleonora, Bigi, Sarah, Potenza, Leonardo, Artioli, Fabrizio, Eliardo, Sonia, Mucciarini, Claudia, Cagossi, Katia, Razzini, Giorgia, Pasqualini, Antonella, Lui, Fausta, Ferlazzo, Fabio, Cruciani, Massimiliano, Bruera, Eduardo, Efficace, Fabio, Luppi, Mario, Cacciari, Cristina, Porro, Carlo Adolfo, Bandieri, Elena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8011738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33788893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248755
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author Borelli, Eleonora
Bigi, Sarah
Potenza, Leonardo
Artioli, Fabrizio
Eliardo, Sonia
Mucciarini, Claudia
Cagossi, Katia
Razzini, Giorgia
Pasqualini, Antonella
Lui, Fausta
Ferlazzo, Fabio
Cruciani, Massimiliano
Bruera, Eduardo
Efficace, Fabio
Luppi, Mario
Cacciari, Cristina
Porro, Carlo Adolfo
Bandieri, Elena
author_facet Borelli, Eleonora
Bigi, Sarah
Potenza, Leonardo
Artioli, Fabrizio
Eliardo, Sonia
Mucciarini, Claudia
Cagossi, Katia
Razzini, Giorgia
Pasqualini, Antonella
Lui, Fausta
Ferlazzo, Fabio
Cruciani, Massimiliano
Bruera, Eduardo
Efficace, Fabio
Luppi, Mario
Cacciari, Cristina
Porro, Carlo Adolfo
Bandieri, Elena
author_sort Borelli, Eleonora
collection PubMed
description Early palliative/supportive care (ePSC) is a medical intervention focused on patient’s needs, that integrates standard oncological treatment, shortly after a diagnosis of advanced/metastatic cancer. ePSC improves the appropriate management of cancer pain. Understanding the semantic and emotional impact of the words used by patients to describe their pain may further improve its assessment in the ePSC setting. Psycholinguistics assumes that the semantic and affective properties of words affect the ease by which they are processed and comprehended. Therefore, in this cross-sectional survey study we collected normative data about the semantic and affective properties of words associated to physical and social pain, in order to investigate how patients with cancer pain on ePSC process them compared to healthy, pain-free individuals. One hundred ninety patients and 124 matched controls rated the Familiarity, Valence, Arousal, Pain-relatedness, Intensity, and Unpleasantness of 94 words expressing physical and social pain. Descriptive and inferential statistics were performed on ratings in order to unveil patients’ semantic and affective representation of pain and compare it with those from controls. Possible effects of variables associated to the illness experience were also tested. Both groups perceived the words conveying social pain as more negative and pain-related than those expressing physical pain, confirming previous evidence of social pain described as worse than physical pain. Patients rated pain words as less negative, less pain-related, and conveying a lower intense and unpleasant pain than controls, suggesting either an adaptation to the pain experience or the role played by ePSC in improving patients’ ability to cope with it. This exploratory study suggests that a chronic pain experience as the one experienced by cancer patients on ePSC affects the semantic and affective representation of pain words.
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spelling pubmed-80117382021-04-07 Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals Borelli, Eleonora Bigi, Sarah Potenza, Leonardo Artioli, Fabrizio Eliardo, Sonia Mucciarini, Claudia Cagossi, Katia Razzini, Giorgia Pasqualini, Antonella Lui, Fausta Ferlazzo, Fabio Cruciani, Massimiliano Bruera, Eduardo Efficace, Fabio Luppi, Mario Cacciari, Cristina Porro, Carlo Adolfo Bandieri, Elena PLoS One Research Article Early palliative/supportive care (ePSC) is a medical intervention focused on patient’s needs, that integrates standard oncological treatment, shortly after a diagnosis of advanced/metastatic cancer. ePSC improves the appropriate management of cancer pain. Understanding the semantic and emotional impact of the words used by patients to describe their pain may further improve its assessment in the ePSC setting. Psycholinguistics assumes that the semantic and affective properties of words affect the ease by which they are processed and comprehended. Therefore, in this cross-sectional survey study we collected normative data about the semantic and affective properties of words associated to physical and social pain, in order to investigate how patients with cancer pain on ePSC process them compared to healthy, pain-free individuals. One hundred ninety patients and 124 matched controls rated the Familiarity, Valence, Arousal, Pain-relatedness, Intensity, and Unpleasantness of 94 words expressing physical and social pain. Descriptive and inferential statistics were performed on ratings in order to unveil patients’ semantic and affective representation of pain and compare it with those from controls. Possible effects of variables associated to the illness experience were also tested. Both groups perceived the words conveying social pain as more negative and pain-related than those expressing physical pain, confirming previous evidence of social pain described as worse than physical pain. Patients rated pain words as less negative, less pain-related, and conveying a lower intense and unpleasant pain than controls, suggesting either an adaptation to the pain experience or the role played by ePSC in improving patients’ ability to cope with it. This exploratory study suggests that a chronic pain experience as the one experienced by cancer patients on ePSC affects the semantic and affective representation of pain words. Public Library of Science 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8011738/ /pubmed/33788893 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248755 Text en © 2021 Borelli et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Borelli, Eleonora
Bigi, Sarah
Potenza, Leonardo
Artioli, Fabrizio
Eliardo, Sonia
Mucciarini, Claudia
Cagossi, Katia
Razzini, Giorgia
Pasqualini, Antonella
Lui, Fausta
Ferlazzo, Fabio
Cruciani, Massimiliano
Bruera, Eduardo
Efficace, Fabio
Luppi, Mario
Cacciari, Cristina
Porro, Carlo Adolfo
Bandieri, Elena
Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title_full Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title_fullStr Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title_full_unstemmed Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title_short Different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
title_sort different semantic and affective meaning of the words associated to physical and social pain in cancer patients on early palliative/supportive care and in healthy, pain-free individuals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8011738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33788893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248755
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