Co-occurring pain and emotional difficulties are strikingly common and a true challenge in the clinic. Nearly all pain patients suffer from some kind of emotional distress. In the last decade, research in the field has started to focus on the role of underlying processes in concurrent problems with pain and emotional distress. This symposium is therefore focused on the link between pain and emotion and will highlight new perspectives on processes, theoretical as well as clinical. Talks will address the role of biological mechanisms, interpersonal contexts and the development of the new treatment approaches.
Poor emotion regulation has been pointed out as one core process, which may explain the high co-occurrence of pain and emotional distress. Current treatments have not succeeded in helping paon patients with high levels of emotional distress, and therefore a new treatment approach has been developed, based on emotion regulation theory and exposure techniques. Dr. Katja Boersma will describe the theory beind this new intervention and present preliminary data from an RCT in patients with chronic pain and emotional distress.
Another treatment approach with well documented effects in this area is ACT. However, large variability in treatment effects can be seen consistently across studies and predictors of outcome remain unclear. Few studies have yet investigated the role of biological processes in ACT. Dr. Rikard Wicksell will briefly describe ACT for patients with chronic pain, bring up recent findings on ACT and neuroscience, and discuss implications for future research and clinical development.
Pain-related fear is a salient emotion in many pain patients, which tend to lead to avoidance of movements or activities. Avoidance behaviors are negatively reinfrced as they lead to less pain for the moment; in the long run, however, it often results in inactivity and disuse. Furthermore, a change in neural response profile, so called cortical reorganization, occurs in cortical sensory and motor areas. Targeting immobilisation and cortical reorganisation, using cognitive behavioral, sensory, and motor strategies, may improve function in individuals with chronic pain. Dr. Kristoffer Bothelius will present findings in this area and discuss possible treatment implications.
One way of regulating pain and negative emotions is to share personal experiences with others. However, it is important to know where, when and with whom to share; in other terms, to be context sensitive. The opposite, context insensitivity, has been related to prolonged and exaggerated emotional distress. The theory, importance and potential clinical implications of context sensitivity in the area pf pain and emotional distress will serve the basis for the presentation by Dr. Ida Flink, and data from an ongoing project will be presented.
The link between pain and emotional distress may become extra salient when the pain occurs in an intimate interpersonal context. Vulvovaginal pain in women has been neglected in pain research, but is closely linked to emotional reactions such as fear and anxiety. Dr. Johanna Thomtén will describe the link between pain and emotional distress among women suffering from vulvovaginal pain, presenting data from an ongoing longitudinal project.
2016. p. 162-162