Adolescent predictors of substance use in young adulthood among individuals with childhood-onset chronic pain: A follow-up study.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY European Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2024-09-09 DOI:10.1002/ejp.4724
Andrew H Rogers, Tonya M Palermo, Cornelius B Groenewald, Caitlin B Murray
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Abstract

Background: Adolescent chronic pain is a substantial public health problem, and pain symptoms often persist into adulthood. Young adults with chronic pain are at elevated risk for more frequent tobacco, alcohol and cannabis use, and cross-sectional research highlights the importance of psychosocial vulnerability factors. Limited research has examined how adolescent predictors, including mental health symptoms, pain, sleep and family functioning, impact later, young adult substance use.

Methods: A prospective cohort of 229 young adults (77.3% female; Mage = 21.0, SD = 1.6) with childhood-onset chronic pain completed measurements in adolescence and a follow-up assessment in young adulthood of past 3-month substance use frequency.

Results: Adolescent sleep quality and male sex were associated with more frequent tobacco use; adolescent depression was associated with more frequent alcohol use, and adolescent pain severity was associated with less frequent, and male sex was associated with more frequent cannabis use.

Conclusions: Adolescent predictors of young adult substance use among youth with childhood-onset chronic pain represent important factors that may inform assessment, prevention and treatment of substance use in this population. Identifying and testing psychological interventions that target these vulnerability factors may reduce overall substance use risk in young adulthood.

Significance: This prospective observational study of young adults with childhood-onset chronic pain identified adolescent depression and sleep quality as vulnerability factors associated with substance use. Given the increasing risk for substance use during adolescence and young adulthood, these findings highlight the potential importance of early intervention to reduce substance use among young adults with childhood-onset chronic pain.

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儿童期慢性疼痛患者成年后使用药物的青少年时期预测因素:跟踪研究。
背景:青少年慢性疼痛是一个严重的公共卫生问题,疼痛症状往往持续到成年。患有慢性疼痛的青少年更频繁地使用烟草、酒精和大麻的风险更高,横断面研究强调了社会心理脆弱性因素的重要性。对青少年时期的预测因素(包括心理健康症状、疼痛、睡眠和家庭功能)如何影响日后青壮年药物使用的研究十分有限:方法:对 229 名患有儿童期慢性疼痛的年轻成年人(77.3% 为女性;年龄 = 21.0,SD = 1.6)进行了前瞻性队列研究,他们在青春期完成了测量,并在青年期完成了对过去 3 个月药物使用频率的随访评估:结果:青春期睡眠质量和男性性别与更频繁使用烟草有关;青春期抑郁与更频繁使用酒精有关;青春期疼痛严重程度与较少使用大麻有关,而男性性别与更频繁使用大麻有关:结论:在患有儿童期慢性疼痛的青少年中,青少年时期对成年后药物使用的预测代表了一些重要因素,这些因素可为评估、预防和治疗该人群的药物使用提供参考。确定并测试针对这些易感因素的心理干预措施可能会降低青少年成年后使用药物的总体风险:这项针对患有儿童期慢性疼痛的年轻成年人的前瞻性观察研究发现,青春期抑郁和睡眠质量是与药物使用相关的易感因素。鉴于青春期和青年期使用药物的风险不断增加,这些研究结果凸显了早期干预对减少儿童期慢性疼痛青年患者使用药物的潜在重要性。
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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.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Harnessing the therapeutic effects of nature for chronic Pain: A role for immersive virtual reality? A narrative review Adolescent predictors of substance use in young adulthood among individuals with childhood-onset chronic pain: A follow-up study. Preoperative measures of pain at rest and movement-evoked pain in knee arthroplasty: Associations with pain and function outcome trajectories from a prospective multicentre longitudinal cohort study. Authors' reply to the comment by Kallewaard, Duarte, Eldabe and Thomson.
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