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- Title
Emotional awareness and expression difficulties in relation to pain experiences in people with brain injury and chronic pain: preliminary investigation.
- Authors
Neumann, Dawn; Parrott, Devan; Lumley, Mark A.; Williams, Michael W.; Qureshi, Fahad; Hammond, Flora M.
- Abstract
Objectives: Preliminary examination of emotional awareness/expression relationships with pain in people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and chronic pain (CP) and exploration of psychological factors as mediators or moderators of these relationships. Methods: Cross-sectional study in adults (N = 59) with chronic TBI and CP using Toronto Alexithymia Scale-20 Difficulty Identifying and Describing Feelings subscales; Ambivalence over Emotional Expressiveness Questionnaire; Emotional Approach Coping Scale; PROMIS Pain Intensity and Pain Interference scales, Michigan Body Map (pain widespreadness); headache frequency; Pain Catastrophizing Scale; Brief Symptom Inventory-18 (psychological distress), and Post-traumatic Stress Checklist-Civilian. Results: Difficulty Identifying Feelings was positively associated with pain intensity, pain interference, and headache frequency. Difficulty Describing Feelings was positively correlated with pain interference and headache frequency. Emotional Approach Coping was inversely correlated with headache frequency. Emotional awareness/expression relationships with pain outcomes were mediated by Pain Catastrophizing; Difficulty Describing Feelings relationships with Pain Interference and headache frequency were mediated by psychological distress; and Difficulty Describing Feelings associations with Pain Interference were mediated by post-traumatic stress. No moderators were identified. Conclusion: These preliminary findings suggest that emotional awareness/expression is linked to pain in adults with TBI and CP, which may be connected via pain catastrophizing and psychological distress. If longitudinal studies with larger samples produce similar findings, researchers should explore training emotional awareness/expression for possible pain management after TBI.
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain & psychology; CROSS-sectional method; POST-traumatic stress disorder; PSYCHOLOGICAL distress; RESEARCH funding; QUESTIONNAIRES; BRIEF Symptom Inventory; HEADACHE; EMOTIONS; PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation; PAIN threshold; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; BRAIN injuries; PAIN catastrophizing; COGNITION; DISEASE complications; PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
- Publication
Brain Injury, 2025, Vol 39, Issue 2, p145
- ISSN
0269-9052
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1080/02699052.2024.2413628