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Multicenter Study
. 2018 Feb;159(2):342-350.
doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001102.

Variability in negative emotions among individuals with chronic low back pain: relationships with pain and function

Affiliations
Multicenter Study

Variability in negative emotions among individuals with chronic low back pain: relationships with pain and function

James I Gerhart et al. Pain. 2018 Feb.

Abstract

Chronic pain is associated with elevated negative emotions, and resources needed to adaptively regulate these emotions can be depleted during prolonged pain. Studies of links between pain, function, and negative emotions in people with chronic pain, however, have focused almost exclusively on relationships among mean levels of these factors. Indexes that may reflect aspects of emotion regulation have typically not been analyzed. We propose that 1 index of emotion regulation is variability in emotion over time as opposed to average emotion over time. The sample was 105 people with chronic low back pain and 105 of their pain-free spouses. They completed electronic diary measures 5x/d for 14 consecutive days, producing 70 observations per person from which we derived estimates of within-subject variance in negative emotions. Location-scale models were used to simultaneously model predictors of both mean level and variance in patient negative emotions over time. Patients reported significantly more variability in negative emotions compared to their spouses. Patients who reported higher average levels of pain, pain interference, and downtime reported significantly higher levels of variability in negative emotions. Spouse-observed pain and pain behaviors were also associated with greater variability in patients' negative emotions. Test of the inverse associations between negative emotion level and variability in pain and function were significant but weaker in magnitude. These findings support the notion that chronic pain may erode negative emotion regulation resources, to the potential detriment of intra- and inter-personal function.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Raw State Anger Scores of Two Subjects. Although both subjects have similar mean state anger scores, there is substantially more variability in the state anger scores reported by subject 2.

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