Altered cardiovascular/pain regulatory relationships in chronic pain
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in International Journal of Behavioral Medicine
- Vol. 5 (1) , 63-75
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327558ijbm0501_5
Abstract
In healthy individuals, there is an inverse relationship between resting blood pressure (BP) and pain sensitivity. This study examined possible dysregulation of this adaptive relation in chronic pain patients, and tested whether the extent of this dysregulation is a function of pain duration, Continuous resting BPs were assessed for 5 min after a 5-min rest period in 121 chronic benign pain patients. Unlike the inverse relationship observed previously in normals, mean resting diastolic BPs during the assessment period were correlated positively with ratings of pain severity. A Pain Duration x Systolic BP i nteraction emerged (p > .05) such that the magnitude of the BP-pain relation was greatest in patients with the longest duration of pain, r(38) = .50, p > .001. A hypothesized progressive alteration in endogenous pain regulatory systems in chronic pain patients was supported. A possible role of endogenous opioid dysfunction in accounting for these alterations is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Linking symptom-specific physiological reactivity to pain severity in chronic low back pain patients: A test of mediation and moderation models.Health Psychology, 1997
- Pain Sensitivity in Patients with Temporomandibular Disorders: Relationship to Clinical and Psychosocial FactorsThe Clinical Journal of Pain, 1996
- Hypertension-Associated HypalgesiaHypertension, 1996
- Effects of mental stressors on mitogen induced lymphocyte responses in the laboratoryPsychology & Health, 1993
- Relation between systemic hypertension and pain perceptionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1992
- Arterial hypertension is associated with hypalgesia in humans.Hypertension, 1988
- The West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory (WHYMPI)Pain, 1985
- Endogenous opiate peptides, stress reactivity, and risk for hypertension.Hypertension, 1985
- Hypoalgesia in genetically hypertensive rats (SHR) is absent in rats with experimental hypertension.Hypertension, 1983
- Pain sensitivity and opioid activity in genetically and experimentally hypertensive ratsBrain Research, 1980