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The role of expectations and endogenous opioids in mindfulness-based relief of experimentally-induced acute pain.

Expectations contribute to cognitive pain modulation through opioidergically-mediated descending inhibition. Mindfulness meditation reduces pain independent of endogenous opioids, engaging unique corticothalamo-cortical mechanisms. However, it remains unknown whether expectations for pain-relief predict mindfulness-induced analgesia and if these expectations are modified by endogenous opioids.

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Prediction of Persistent Pain Severity and Impact 12 Months After Breast Surgery Using Comprehensive Preoperative Assessment of Biopsychosocial Pain Modulators.

Persistent post-mastectomy pain (PPMP) is a significant negative outcome occurring after breast surgery, and understanding which individual women are most at risk is essential to targeting of preventive efforts. The biopsychosocial model of pain suggests that factors from many domains may importantly modulate pain processing and predict the progression to pain persistence.

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Chronic musculoskeletal pain prospectively predicts insomnia in older people, not moderated by age, gender or co-morbid illnesses.

The study evaluated if chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain predicts the severity of insomnia, and whether the effect is moderated by age, gender, and number of comorbid diseases in older people. An 18-month prospective study was performed within the framework of a community health program in Hong Kong. A total of 498 older people aged ≥ 60 with multimorbidity were recruited. The predictors included the presence of chronic MSK pain, pain measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), insomnia measured by baseline Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), and number of co-morbid diseases, age, and gender. The outcome was ISI repeated at 18 months. The moderators included age, gender, and number of comorbid diseases. Multivariate linear regression and moderation analysis were conducted. We found that the presence of chronic MSK pain (β = 1.725; 95% CI, 0.607-2.842; P < 0.01) predicted the severity of ISI, after controlling for age, gender, BMI, and the number of comorbid diseases. Participants with chronic MSK pain throughout the period had worse trend of improvement in ISI compared to those who were "pain-free" (β = 2.597; 95% CI, 1.311-3.882; P < 0.001). Age, gender, and number of comorbid diseases did not moderate the longitudinal relationship. We propose that pain management should prioritized in the prevention of insomnia.

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The effect of electroacupuncture on regulating pain and depression-like behaviors induced by chronic neuropathic pain.

Recently, the role of electroacupuncture (EA) in chronic neuropathic pain has been widely reported. However, its specific mechanisms and ability to mitigate depression-like behaviors induced by chronic pain remains unclear. This study aims to determine the analgesic and antidepressant effect of EA.

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Preoperative cognitive-behavioral therapy for reducing pain catastrophizing and improving pain outcomes after total knee replacement: a randomized clinical trial.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) can reduce preoperative pain catastrophizing and may improve postsurgical pain outcomes. We hypothesized that CBT would reduce pain catastrophizing more than no-CBT controls and result in improved pain outcomes.

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Pain-related beliefs, cognitive processes, and electroencephalography band power as predictors and mediators of the effects of psychological chronic pain interventions.

The current study used data from a clinical trial to identify variables that are associated with and/or mediate the beneficial effects of four psychological chronic pain treatments: one teaching patients self-hypnosis to reduce pain intensity (HYP), one teaching self-hypnosis to change thoughts about pain (hypnotic cognitive therapy, or HYP-CT), one teaching cognitive restructuring skills to change thoughts about pain (cognitive therapy, or CT), and one providing education about pain (ED; included as an active control condition). Of 17 possible mechanism variables examined, and with alpha not corrected for multiple comparisons, significant between-group differences were observed for three. Two of these (changes in beliefs about control over pain and number of days of skill practice) were supported as mediators of the beneficial effects of HYP, CT, or HYP-CT, relative to ED. Six mechanism variables evidenced significant pre- to post-treatment changes in the sample as a whole, without showing significant between-group differences. Pre- to post-treatment changes in all six were associated with improvements in pain interference, pain intensity, or both. In addition, participant ratings of therapeutic alliance at post-treatment were associated significantly with improvements in both pain intensity and pain interference in the sample as a whole. Thus, of the 17 possible mediators examined, there were relatively few that serve as mediators for the beneficial effects of specific treatments; a larger number of variables predicted treatment outcome overall. The extent to which these variables are treatment mediators (i.e., are responsible for, rather than merely associated with, treatment-related improvements) will require further research.

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“I have failed to separate my HIV from this pain”: the challenge of managing chronic pain among people with HIV.

Pain is a highly prevalent and burdensome symptom among people with HIV (PWH). This study aims to identify how the experience of living with HIV and chronic pain influences pain beliefs, health-seeking and pain management. Thirty-nine purposively sampled PWH with chronic pain (sample characteristics = 61% women, 79% Black, Asian and minority ethnic groups, 18% men who have sex with men, 45-54 median age category) participated in focus groups in London. Focus groups were co-facilitated with community members. Transcripts wereanalysed using a thematic approach. Findings revealed that HIV stigma, fractured care pathways, and general practitioners' lack of HIV training are barriers to supported pain management. Unaddressed pain results in poorer mental health and reduced quality of life, which has important clinical implications for HIV treatment adherence. Creating HIV-specific pain resources, activating social networks, and pain self-management techniques are potential solutions. Person-centred assessment and HIV training is needed to help clinicians identify PWH with chronic pain. Clear guidelines need to be developed to identify which health service providers are responsible for chronic pain management in PWH. This study generated a refined version of the Fear Avoidance Model that introduces a dimension of HIV-specific behaviours that impact PWHs seeking chronic pain management.

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Recent Applications of Virtual Reality for the Management of Pain in Burn and Pediatric Patients.

Virtual reality, via integration of immersive visual and auditory modalities, offers an innovative approach to pain management. The purpose of this review is to investigate the clinical application of virutal reality as an adjunct analgesic to standard of care, particularly in pediatric and burn patients.

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Double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial of 8-week self-administered at-home behavioral skills-based virtual reality (VR) for chronic low back pain (during COVID-19).

Background: Chronic low back pain is the most prevalent chronic pain condition worldwide and access to behavioral pain treatment is limited. Virtual reality (VR) is an immersive technology that may provide effective behavioral therapeutics for chronic pain.

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Brief preoperative mind-body therapies for total joint arthroplasty patients: a randomized controlled trial.

While knee and hip replacements are intended to relieve pain and improve function, up to 44% of knee replacement patients and 27% of hip replacement patients report persistent postoperative joint pain. Improving surgical pain management is essential. We conducted a single-site, three-arm, parallel-group randomized clinical trial conducted at an orthopedic clinic, among patients undergoing total joint arthroplasty (TJA) of the hip or knee. Mindfulness meditation (MM), hypnotic suggestion (HS), and cognitive-behavioral pain psychoeducation (CBE) were each delivered in a single, 15-minute group session as part of a 2-hour, preoperative education program. Preoperative outcomes – pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, pain medication desire, and anxiety – were measured with numeric rating scales. Postoperative physical functioning at 6-week follow-up was assessed with the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Physical Function computer adaptive test. TJA patients were randomized to preoperative MM, HS, or CBE (n=285). MM and HS led to significantly less preoperative pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, and anxiety. MM also decreased preoperative pain medication desire relative to CBE and increased postoperative physical functioning at 6-week follow-up relative to HS and CBE. Moderation analysis revealed surgery type did not differentially impact the three interventions. Thus, a single session of a simple, scripted MM intervention may be able to immediately decrease TJA patients' preoperative clinical symptomology and improve postoperative physical function. As such, embedding brief MM interventions in surgical care pathways has the potential to improve surgical outcomes for the millions of patients receiving TJA each year.

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