Parameters of anger as related to sensory-affective components of pain
Author:
Fernandez Ephrem1, Pham Tuan M.2, Kolaparthi Krishna3, Sun Renhao4, Perez Brandon S.5, Iwuala Emmanuel C.5, Wu Wenbo4, Shattuck Eric C.6
Affiliation:
1. Psychology Department , University of Texas San Antonio , San Antonio , TX , USA 2. University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston , USA 3. University of Texas San Antonio, Institute for Health Disparities Research , San Antonio , USA 4. Department of Management Science & Statistics , University of Texas San Antonio , San Antonio , USA 5. University of Texas San Antonio , San Antonio , USA 6. Institute for Health Disparities Research and Department of Public Health, University of Texas San Antonio , San Antonio , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Comorbid with chronic pain are negative emotions, anger being particularly salient. To evaluate specific relationships between pain and anger, the present study deconstructed anger into five parameters and dichotomized pain into sensory vs. affective components. Hypotheses were (i) anger parameters would be significantly and positively correlated with affective pain more so than with sensory pain, and (ii) individual parameters would be differentially related to pain components.
Methods
The Anger Parameters Scale (APS) was used to rate five parameters of anger: frequency, duration, intensity, latency, and threshold. Also rated was the physical sensation of pain and the degree of distress from pain. The volunteer sample comprised n=51 chronic pain patients, varying in ethnicity/race and educational level.
Results
Descriptive statistics revealed: APS total M=71.52, SD=16.68, Sensory pain M=6.27, SD=2.15, Affective pain M=5.76, SD=2.28. Sensory and affective pain were highly correlated, r=0.70. APS total was significantly associated with affective pain (r=+0.28) but hardly with sensory pain (r=0.12). Two anger parameters significantly correlated with affective pain: anger frequency (r=+0.30, p<0.05) and anger threshold (r=+0.33, p<0.05). Secondarily, certain educational levels (but not gender and ethnicity/race) were associated with significantly higher APS total scores.
Conclusions
Scores for all variables were in the mid-range. As hypothesized, anger was more strongly correlated with distress/suffering of pain than with physical sensation of pain, though both pain components were closely coupled. Specific findings regarding frequency and threshold imply that being angry often and being oversensitive to provocation are associated with greater distress in this context. In deconstructing anger and dichotomizing pain, the present study extends previous research by elaborating on what aspects of anger are most related to which components of pain. Moreover, certain educational levels with higher levels of anger may need special attention. Further research could examine if treatment of anger might lead to corresponding changes in chronic pain.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology (clinical)
Reference24 articles.
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