TY - JOUR AU - Refshauge K. AU - Nicholas M. AU - Linton S. AU - Boersma K. AU - Bergbom S. AU - McDonald S. AU - Maher C. AB -
Many patients with musculoskeletal pain also suffer from a depressed mood. Catastrophizing is one process that may link depression and pain since it is a key concept in models of both problems. Earlier research has suggested that catastrophizing measures something above and beyond depression. This study tests the idea that if depressed mood and catastrophizing are separate entities then when one is absent the other should still contribute to poor outcome, and, when both are present there should be an additional adverse effect. To this end, a prospective design, with a built-in replication from two clinical samples of patients with sub-acute pain (one from Sweden, N=373; one from Australasia, N=259), was employed. Participants were classified as to having high/low scores on measures of depression and catastrophizing. Subsequently, these classifications were studied in relation to outcome variables cross-sectionally and at follow-up. Results showed a small to moderate correlation between catastrophizing and depression and that there are individuals with one, but not the other problem. Further, having one or the other of the entities was associated with current pain problems and outcome, while having both increased the associations substantially. The replication showed very similar results Our data demonstrate that pain catastrophizing and heightened depressed mood have an additive and adverse effect on the impact of pain, relative to either alone. It suggests that each should be assessed in the clinic and that future research should focus on treatments specifically designed to tackle both depressed mood and catastrophizing.
AD - Center for Health and Medical Psychology, School of Law, Psychology, and Social Work, Orebro University, Sweden. steven.linton@oru.se AN - 20884261 BT - European Journal of Pain DA - 78067936918 ET - 2010/10/05 LA - eng M1 - 4 N1 - Linton, Steven JNicholas, Michael KMacDonald, ShaneBoersma, KatjaBergbom, SofiaMaher, ChrisRefshauge, KathyRandomized Controlled TrialEnglandEuropean journal of pain (London, England)Eur J Pain. 2011 Apr;15(4):416-22. Epub 2010 Sep 29. N2 -Many patients with musculoskeletal pain also suffer from a depressed mood. Catastrophizing is one process that may link depression and pain since it is a key concept in models of both problems. Earlier research has suggested that catastrophizing measures something above and beyond depression. This study tests the idea that if depressed mood and catastrophizing are separate entities then when one is absent the other should still contribute to poor outcome, and, when both are present there should be an additional adverse effect. To this end, a prospective design, with a built-in replication from two clinical samples of patients with sub-acute pain (one from Sweden, N=373; one from Australasia, N=259), was employed. Participants were classified as to having high/low scores on measures of depression and catastrophizing. Subsequently, these classifications were studied in relation to outcome variables cross-sectionally and at follow-up. Results showed a small to moderate correlation between catastrophizing and depression and that there are individuals with one, but not the other problem. Further, having one or the other of the entities was associated with current pain problems and outcome, while having both increased the associations substantially. The replication showed very similar results Our data demonstrate that pain catastrophizing and heightened depressed mood have an additive and adverse effect on the impact of pain, relative to either alone. It suggests that each should be assessed in the clinic and that future research should focus on treatments specifically designed to tackle both depressed mood and catastrophizing.
PY - 2011 SN - 1532-2149 (Electronic)1090-3801 (Linking) SP - 416 EP - 22 T2 - European Journal of Pain TI - The role of depression and catastrophizing in musculoskeletal pain VL - 15 ER -