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- Title
Transdiagnostic Cognitive Processes in Chronic Pain and Comorbid PTSD and Depression in Veterans.
- Authors
Day, Melissa A; Williams, Rhonda M; Turner, Aaron P; Ehde, Dawn M; Jensen, Mark P
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>Chronic pain in Veterans is a major problem compounded by comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. Adopting a transdiagnostic framework to understanding "shared territory" among these diagnoses has the potential to inform our understanding of the underlying cognitive processes and mechanisms that transverse diagnostic boundaries.<bold>Purpose: </bold>To examine the associations between pain-related cognitive processes (diversion, distancing, absorption, and openness), pain intensity, PTSD and depressive symptoms, and the extent to which Veterans with chronic pain with and without comorbid PTSD and depression engage in different/similar pain-related cognitive processes.<bold>Methods: </bold>Secondary analysis of pretreatment data with a subsample (n = 147) of Veterans with chronic pain from a larger clinical trial. Pretreatment PCL-5 and PROMIS Depression scales were used to categorize participants into three groups: (a) Pain-only; (b) Pain-PTSD; and (c) Pain-PTSD-DEP.<bold>Results: </bold>Compared to the Pain-only group, the Pain-PTSD and Pain-PTSD-DEP groups reported significantly greater pain intensity, PTSD and depressive symptoms, and ruminative pain absorption. The Pain-PTSD-DEP group had significantly lower pain diversion and pain openness scores. When diversion and openness were used within the Pain-PTSD-DEP group, however, they were both associated with lower pain intensity and openness was additionally associated with lower PTSD scores. However, in the Pain-PTSD group, pain openness was associated with higher depression scores.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Across increasing complexity of comorbidity profiles (i.e., one vs. two comorbid conditions), ruminative absorption with pain emerged as a cognitive process that transverses diagnoses and contributes to worse outcomes. Nonjudgmental acceptance may not be universally beneficial, potentially depending upon the nature of comorbidity profiles.
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain; POST-traumatic stress disorder; COMORBIDITY; VETERANS; OPENNESS to experience; PAIN; MENTAL depression
- Publication
Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 2022, Vol 56, Issue 2, p157
- ISSN
0883-6612
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1093/abm/kaab033