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Cognitive processing styles of children and adolescents with headache and back pain: a longitudinal epidemiological study

Previous research has shown positive relationships between dysfunctional cognitive styles and different aspects of pain (eg, pain frequency). One goal of our longitudinal study was to investigate potential risk factors for the incidence of headache (HA) and back pain (BP). In the first wave (2003),...

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Published in:Journal of pain research 2014-01, Vol.7 (default), p.405-414
Main Authors: Barke, Antonia, Gaßmann, Jennifer, Kröner-Herwig, Birgit
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description Previous research has shown positive relationships between dysfunctional cognitive styles and different aspects of pain (eg, pain frequency). One goal of our longitudinal study was to investigate potential risk factors for the incidence of headache (HA) and back pain (BP). In the first wave (2003), questionnaires were sent to 6,400 children between the ages of 9 and 14 years. Those who answered in wave 1 were contacted again every year (four survey waves in total: 2003-2006). The data presented are based on the children's self-reports in the second wave (2004) and third wave (2005). Potential risk factors (dysfunctional stress coping, pain catastrophizing, anxiety sensitivity, and somatosensory amplification) were collected in wave 2. Binary logistic regression analyses - for boys and girls - were performed to assess the predictive value of the risk factors for HA and BP in wave 3. In the comprehensive model, none of the examined variables predicted the incidence of HA. Anxiety sensitivity increased the risk that boys would report BP after 1 year by 50% and dysfunctional stress coping increased the risk by 40%. For girls, somatosensory amplification increased the risk of the incidence of BP 1 year later by 80%, whereas pain catastrophizing reduced the risk by 50%. In this incidence sample, the amount of variance explained by the psychological variables investigated was very small. Integrating this result with existing findings from cross-sectional studies suggests that dysfunctional cognitive processing styles may develop more as a consequence or a concomitant feature of BP or HA, but play a less important role in its initial development.
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source Taylor & Francis_OA刊; Publicly Available Content Database; IngentaConnect Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Anxiety
Back pain
Backache
Behavior
Children & youth
Clinical psychology
Coping
Demographic aspects
Diagnosis
Epidemiology
Headache
Headaches
incidence
Longitudinal studies
longitudinal study
Original Research
Panic attacks
Pediatrics
Psychotherapy
Questionnaires
Risk factors
Stress
Studies
Teenagers
title Cognitive processing styles of children and adolescents with headache and back pain: a longitudinal epidemiological study
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