身体成分和体重指数与老年人广泛性疼痛和实验性疼痛敏感性的独立相关性:一项试点调查。

IF 2.5 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2024-07-01 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpain.2024.1386573
Alisa J Johnson, Jessica A Peterson, Heather K Vincent, Todd Manini, Yenisel Cruz-Almeida
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:慢性肌肉骨骼(MSK)疼痛在老年人中十分普遍,是丧失独立性和生活质量低下的重要风险因素。虽然肥胖被认为是罹患慢性 MSK 疼痛的一个风险因素,但身体质量指数(BMI)的高低都与老年人报告的疼痛次数增多有关。区分脂肪量和瘦肉量的身体成分测量方法可能有助于澄清这一高风险人群的体重指数与 MSK 疼痛之间看似矛盾的关系:二十四名老年人(平均年龄:78.08 ± 5.1 岁)完成了双能 X 射线吸收测量(DEXA)和疼痛测量(慢性疼痛分级量表、解剖学疼痛部位数量、压力痛阈值、机械时间总和)。皮尔逊相关性和多元线性回归研究了体重指数(BMI)、身体成分指数和疼痛之间的关系:在考虑年龄和性别因素后,疼痛部位数量与体重指数(b = 0.37)和总脂肪量(b = 0.42)之间存在显著的正相关。总瘦体重与压力痛敏感性相关(b = 0.65),表明瘦体重越大,机械痛敏感性越低:讨论:这项探索性试点研究的结果表明,瘦体重可为老年人疼痛处理过程中的适应性不良变化提供额外的复原力,并强调了区分身体成分指数和总体体重指数的重要性,以便更好地了解肥胖与老年人多发性硬化关节疼痛之间的复杂关系。
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Body composition and body mass index are independently associated with widespread pain and experimental pain sensitivity in older adults: a pilot investigation.

Introduction: Chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is prevalent in older adults and confers significant risk for loss of independence and low quality of life. While obesity is considered a risk factor for developing chronic MSK pain, both high and low body mass index (BMI) have been associated with greater pain reporting in older adults. Measures of body composition that distinguish between fat mass and lean mass may help to clarify the seemingly contradictory associations between BMI and MSK pain in this at-risk group.

Methods: Twenty-four older adults (mean age: 78.08 ± 5.1 years) completed dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), and pain measures (Graded Chronic Pain Scale, number of anatomical pain sites, pressure pain threshold, mechanical temporal summation). Pearson correlations and multiple liner regression examined associations between body mass index (BMI), body composition indices, and pain.

Results: Significant positive associations were found between number of pain sites and BMI (b = 0.37) and total fat mass (b = 0.42), accounting for age and sex. Total body lean mass was associated with pressure pain sensitivity (b = 0.65), suggesting greater lean mass is associated with less mechanical pain sensitivity.

Discussion: The results from this exploratory pilot study indicate lean mass may provide additional resilience to maladaptive changes in pain processing in older adults, and highlights the importance of distinguishing body composition indices from overall body mass index to better understand the complex relationship between obesity and MSK pain in older adults.

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