• Eur J Pain · Aug 2005

    When sex hurts, anxiety and fear orient attention towards pain.

    • Kimberley A Payne, Yitzchak M Binik, Rhonda Amsel, and Samir Khalifé.
    • Department of Psychology, McGill University, 1205 Dr. Penfield Avenue, Montreal, QC, Canada QC H3A 1B1. kimpayne@ego.psych.mcgill.ca
    • Eur J Pain. 2005 Aug 1;9(4):427-36.

    AbstractHypervigilance for pain-relevant stimuli has been associated with anxiety, fear of pain and anxiety sensitivity. This attentional bias has been primarily investigated in heterogeneous pain groups or pain-free controls, but has not been examined in pain conditions where anxiety and fear are likely to play a central role. Due to the intimate and interpersonal nature of genital pain experienced during sexual intercourse, Vulvar Vestibulitis Syndrome (VVS) constitutes an ideal sample in which to investigate the role of cognitive and affective factors in pain perception and maintenance. Seventeen women suffering from VVS and an equal number of age and education matched control women completed an emotional Stroop and memory recall task in addition to a series of questionnaires assessing pain-hypervigilance, state and trait anxiety, fear of pain, and anxiety sensitivity. VVS sufferers reported hypervigilance for coital pain and also exhibited a selective attentional bias towards pain stimuli on the emotional Stroop task as compared with controls. This effect was predicted by state and trait anxiety and fear of pain. According to these data, treament strategies for VVS should target anxiety and fear in addition to sensory systems.

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