Adverse childhood experiences, brain efficiency, and the development of pain symptoms in youth.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY European Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1002/ejp.4702
Samantha Miller, Karen L Cobos, Nivez Rasic, Xiangyu Long, Catherine Lebel, Neta Bar Am, Melanie Noel, Daniel Kopala-Sibley, Richelle Mychasiuk, Jillian Vinall Miller
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Abstract

Background: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are often reported by youths with chronic pain, and both ACEs and chronic pain disrupt how information is processed. However, it is unknown whether changes to shared neural networks underlie the relationship between ACEs and the development of pain symptoms. This study explored the relationships between ACEs, brain efficiency, and pain symptomology in youth.

Methods: A community sample of youths aged 14-18 years underwent MRIs, answered trauma and pain questionnaires, and underwent pain sensory testing, twice, 3 months apart (Nbaseline = 44; Nfollow-up = 42). Sensory testing determined thresholds for mechanical and thermal stimuli. Global and local network efficiencies were evaluated using graph theory. Generalized estimating equations were applied to examine whether brain efficiency moderated the relationships between ACEs, pain intensity, and pain sensitivity (i.e., mechanical detection, heat pain, and temperature change thresholds).

Results: There was a significant interaction between ACEs and global brain efficiency in association with pain intensity (β = -0.31, p = 0.02) and heat pain (β = -0.29, p = 0.004). Lower global brain efficiency exacerbated the relationship between ACEs and pain intensity (θX → Y|W = -1.16 = 0.37, p = 0.05), and heat pain sensitivity (θX → Y|W = -1.30 = 0.44, p = 0.05). Higher global brain efficiency ameliorated the relationship between ACEs and pain intensity (θX → Y|W = 1.75 = -0.53, p = 0.05).

Conclusions: The relationship between ACEs and pain symptomology was comparable to chronic pain phenotypes (i.e., higher pain intensity and pain thresholds) and may vary as a function of brain efficiency in youth. This stresses the importance of assessing for pain symptoms in trauma-exposed youth, as earlier identification and intervention are critical in preventing the chronification of pain.

Significance: This article explores the relationship between ACEs, pain symptomology, and brain efficiency in youth. ACEs may affect how the brain processes information, including pain. Youths with lower brain efficiencies that were exposed to more ACEs have pain symptomology comparable to youths with chronic pain. Understanding this relationship is important for the earlier identification of pain symptoms, particularly in vulnerable populations such as youths exposed to trauma, and is critical for preventing the chronification of pain.

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不良童年经历、大脑效率和青少年疼痛症状的发展。
背景:患有慢性疼痛的青少年经常报告童年的不良经历(ACE),而ACE和慢性疼痛都会干扰信息的处理方式。然而,ACE与疼痛症状发展之间的关系是否源于共享神经网络的变化,目前尚不得而知。本研究探讨了青少年的ACE、大脑效率和疼痛症状之间的关系:14-18岁的社区青少年样本接受了核磁共振成像检查,回答了创伤和疼痛问卷,并接受了两次疼痛感觉测试,每次间隔3个月(基线样本=44;后续样本=42)。感觉测试确定了机械刺激和热刺激的阈值。使用图论评估了整体和局部网络效率。应用广义估计方程研究大脑效率是否调节了ACE、疼痛强度和疼痛敏感性(即机械检测、热痛和温度变化阈值)之间的关系:结果:在疼痛强度(β = -0.31,p = 0.02)和热痛(β = -0.29,p = 0.004)方面,ACE 与全脑效率之间存在明显的交互作用。较低的全脑效率会加剧 ACE 与疼痛强度(θX → Y|W = -1.16 = 0.37,p = 0.05)和热痛敏感性(θX → Y|W = -1.30 = 0.44,p = 0.05)之间的关系。更高的全脑效率改善了 ACE 与疼痛强度之间的关系(θX → Y|W = 1.75 = -0.53,P = 0.05):ACE与疼痛症状之间的关系与慢性疼痛表型(即较高的疼痛强度和疼痛阈值)相似,并可能随着青少年大脑效率的不同而变化。这强调了对受过创伤的青少年进行疼痛症状评估的重要性,因为早期识别和干预对于防止疼痛慢性化至关重要:本文探讨了青少年的 ACE、疼痛症状和大脑效率之间的关系。ACE可能会影响大脑处理信息(包括疼痛)的方式。接触过更多 ACE 的青少年大脑效率较低,其疼痛症状与患有慢性疼痛的青少年不相上下。了解这种关系对于及早发现疼痛症状非常重要,尤其是对于遭受创伤的青少年等弱势群体,而且对于防止疼痛慢性化也至关重要。
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来源期刊
European Journal of Pain
European Journal of Pain 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
5.60%
发文量
163
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: European Journal of Pain (EJP) publishes clinical and basic science research papers relevant to all aspects of pain and its management, including specialties such as anaesthesia, dentistry, neurology and neurosurgery, orthopaedics, palliative care, pharmacology, physiology, psychiatry, psychology and rehabilitation; socio-economic aspects of pain are also covered. Regular sections in the journal are as follows: • Editorials and Commentaries • Position Papers and Guidelines • Reviews • Original Articles • Letters • Bookshelf The journal particularly welcomes clinical trials, which are published on an occasional basis. Research articles are published under the following subject headings: • Neurobiology • Neurology • Experimental Pharmacology • Clinical Pharmacology • Psychology • Behavioural Therapy • Epidemiology • Cancer Pain • Acute Pain • Clinical Trials.
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