Adolescent predictors of young adult pain and health outcomes: results from a 6-year prospective follow-up study.

IF 5.9 1区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY PAIN® Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-25 DOI:10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003308
Caitlin B Murray, Rui Li, Susmita Kashikar-Zuck, Chuan Zhou, Tonya M Palermo
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Abstract

Abstract: Adolescent chronic pain may lead to persistent disability and long-term health impairments in adulthood. However, our understanding of which youth are more likely to experience adverse outcomes remains limited. To address this gap, this longitudinal cohort study examined adolescent predictors of various dimensions of young adult health and functioning, including pain, physical health, depression, anxiety, social isolation, and sleep disturbance. As part of a previous clinical trial, we recruited a cohort of adolescents (ages 11-17 years, M age = 14 years) with non-disease-related chronic pain from 15 tertiary pain clinics in North America. Approximately 6 years later, 229 of the original 273 individuals (81% participation rate) completed a follow-up survey as young adults (ages 18-25 years, M age = 21 years). At the young adult follow-up, 73% reported continued chronic pain, with two-thirds experiencing moderate-to-severe pain interference. Youth reported several adverse health outcomes, including below-average physical health (37%), clinically elevated depression (42%), clinically elevated anxiety (48%), and sleep disturbances (77%). Multivariate regression analyses controlling for sociodemographic characteristics revealed that higher pain intensity, more pain locations, lower sleep quality, and greater anxiety symptoms in adolescence predicted worse pain outcomes in young adulthood. Moreover, lower sleep quality, greater anxiety symptoms, and worse family functioning predicted worse physical and psychosocial health in adulthood. These findings represent an important first step toward identifying ways to optimize psychological pain interventions. Tailored psychological pain interventions can directly target adolescent vulnerabilities, including mood, sleep, and family risk factors, with the potential to disrupt a lifelong trajectory of pain and suffering.

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青少年对青年疼痛和健康后果的预测:一项为期 6 年的前瞻性跟踪研究的结果。
摘要:青少年慢性疼痛可能会导致成年后的持续残疾和长期健康损害。然而,我们对哪些青少年更有可能经历不良后果的了解仍然有限。为了弥补这一不足,这项纵向队列研究考察了青少年对青年期健康和功能的各种预测因素,包括疼痛、身体健康、抑郁、焦虑、社会隔离和睡眠障碍。作为之前临床试验的一部分,我们从北美 15 家三级疼痛诊所招募了一批患有非疾病相关慢性疼痛的青少年(11-17 岁,平均年龄 = 14 岁)。大约 6 年后,最初的 273 人中有 229 人(参与率 81%)在成年后(18-25 岁,平均年龄 21 岁)完成了随访调查。在青少年的随访中,73%的人表示仍有慢性疼痛,其中三分之二的人有中度至重度疼痛干扰。青少年报告了几种不良健康后果,包括低于平均水平的身体健康(37%)、临床升高的抑郁(42%)、临床升高的焦虑(48%)和睡眠障碍(77%)。控制社会人口学特征的多变量回归分析表明,青少年时期疼痛强度较高、疼痛部位较多、睡眠质量较低和焦虑症状较重,预示着成年后疼痛结果较差。此外,较低的睡眠质量、较重的焦虑症状和较差的家庭功能也预示着成年后较差的身体和心理社会健康状况。这些发现为确定优化疼痛心理干预的方法迈出了重要的第一步。量身定制的疼痛心理干预可以直接针对青少年的弱点,包括情绪、睡眠和家庭风险因素,从而有可能打破疼痛和痛苦的终生轨迹。
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来源期刊
PAIN®
PAIN® 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
8.10%
发文量
242
审稿时长
9 months
期刊介绍: PAIN® is the official publication of the International Association for the Study of Pain and publishes original research on the nature,mechanisms and treatment of pain.PAIN® provides a forum for the dissemination of research in the basic and clinical sciences of multidisciplinary interest.
期刊最新文献
Experiencing pain: perspectives of Patrick D. Wall-founding editor of the journal PAIN. The effect of top-down attention on secondary mechanical hyperalgesia: improvements and controversies? The social nature of human pain. Prediction of the response to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex in peripheral neuropathic pain and validation of a new algorithm. Adolescent predictors of young adult pain and health outcomes: results from a 6-year prospective follow-up study.
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