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- Vanessa de A Citero, James L Levenson, Donna K McClish, Viktor E Bovbjerg, Portia L Cole, Bassam A Dahman, Lynne T Penberthy, Imoigele P Aisiku, Susan D Roseff, and Wally R Smith.
- Department of Psychiatry, Division of Consultation-Liaison, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA. vcitero@uol.com.br
- Pain. 2007 Dec 15;133(1-3):39-46.
AbstractIn several types of chronic pain, catastrophizing has been related to higher pain intensity, and health care utilization but it has not been explored extensively in sickle cell disease (SCD). The objective of the study was to identify the role of catastrophizing in SCD, specifically in relation to painful crises, non-crisis pain, and responses to pain. Two hundred and twenty SCD adults were enrolled in a prospective cohort study of pain and completed between 30 and 188 daily diaries in 6 months. The Catastrophizing subscale (CAT) of the Coping Strategy Questionnaire (CSQ) was administered at baseline and at study exit. Depression and quality of life were measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire and SF-36, respectively, at baseline. The CAT mean was 13.6 (SD=8.4) and higher CAT was correlated with greater depression severity (r=0.48; p<0.001) and poorer quality of life in all domains (r=-0.24 to -0.47; p<0.001). There was no significance difference between CAT mean baseline and exit scores, and the measures were strongly correlated within patients (r=0.69; p<0.001). No difference was found between higher and lower catastrophizers in intensity of pain, distress, interference, and health service utilization, both on crisis or non-crisis SCD-related pain days, after controlling for depression. Adults with SCD had a higher mean catastrophizing score than found in studies of other chronic pain conditions that are not lifelong and life-threatening. CAT scores were not correlated with pain parameters or utilization. The role of catastrophizing in other conditions cannot be generalized to SCD.
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