The Clinical journal of pain
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This study examined the cross-sectional associations among pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, and sleep disturbance among patients receiving methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) for opioid use disorder (OUD) and reporting co-occurring chronic pain. ⋯ Altogether, findings suggest that the sleep disturbance to pain catastrophizing to pain intensity pathway may be a key mechanistic pathway exacerbating pain issues among MMT patients with OUD and chronic pain. These results suggest that interventions targeting sleep disturbance may be warranted among MMT patients with OUD and chronic pain. Future work in this area with longitudinal data is warranted.
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We recently developed a transdiagnostic exposure treatment (the hybrid treatment) for chronic pain patients with concurrent emotional difficulties. This paper investigates the hypothesized treatment processes, specifically: (1) if changes on pain-related dysregulation (catastrophizing, fear-avoidance, and nonacceptance of pain) and general emotion dysregulation (difficulties to regulate a broad spectrum of emotional responses) mediate effects on outcomes; and (2) if mediation is more pronounced for patients who score higher on these processes pretreatment. ⋯ Our findings provide initial support for the transdiagnostic theoretical underpinnings of the hybrid treatment model. Using a hybrid treatment approach that centers on teaching patients emotion-regulation skills before commencing broad exposure successfully influenced both pain-related dysregulation and general emotion dysregulation, which in turn was associated with better treatment outcomes. It appears central to address these processes in pain patients with comorbid emotional problems, especially among patients scoring high on measures of catastrophizing, fear-avoidance, and nonacceptance of pain.
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The Multidimensional Symptom Index (MSI) is a 10-item parallel score frequency×interference patient-reported outcome for use in clinical pain research. This manuscript describes results related to measurement stability, discriminative accuracy when screening for major depressive disorder (MDD), and prognostic validity when predicting recovery trajectories after acute musculoskeletal (MSK) trauma. ⋯ The MSI holds promise as a tool for evaluating change, screening for MDD, and identifying those at high or low risk of poor recovery. The results favor sensitivity over specificity. The labile nature of the acute pain symptoms and a truncated distribution of Nonsomatic Symptoms scores in that group both require some caution in interpretation. The MSI appears to be a potentially useful tool for rapid pain phenotyping, evaluation, and quick screening purposes in clinical practice.
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Sleep disturbance is associated with persistence and exacerbation of chronic pain. As this relationship seems to be bidirectional, factors underpinning sleep disturbance may prove important in multimodal rehabilitation approaches. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to examine the impact of psychological symptoms on subjective and objective sleep measures in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP), as compared with pain-free controls. ⋯ The differences in subjective and objective sleep measures indicate that they probe different aspects of sleep functioning in patients with musculoskeletal pain, and their combined application may be valuable in clinical practice. Self-reported sleep disturbance seems to overlap with affective dimensions reflected by the HSCL questionnaire.