The association between adverse childhood experiences and peripartal pain experience

Author:

Zehetmeier Katharina Fiona1ORCID,Fröhlich Melissa Kathrin1,Schilder Andreas2ORCID,Lis Stefanie34ORCID,Schmahl Christian4ORCID,Treede Rolf-Detlef5ORCID,Sütterlin Marc1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Medical Center Mannheim, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

2. Department of Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

3. Department of Clinical Psychology, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

4. Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

5. Department of Neurophysiology, Mannheim Center for Translational Neuroscience, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with altered ongoing and evoked pain experiences, which have scarcely been studied for the peripartum period. We aimed to investigate how ACEs affect pain experience in pregnancy and labor. For this noninterventional trial with a short-term follow-up, pregnant women were divided into a trauma group (TG) with ACEs (n = 84) and a control group (CG) without ACEs (n = 107) according to the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Pain experience in pregnancy and labor was recorded by self-report and the German Pain Perception Scale. Pain sensitivity prepartum and postpartum was assessed by Quantitative Sensory Testing and a paradigm of conditioned pain modulation (CPM), using pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) and a cold pressor test. The TG showed higher affective and sensory scores for back pain and a more than doubled prevalence of preexisting back pain. Pelvic pain differences were nonsignificant. The TG also exhibited increased affective scores (1.71 ± 0.15 vs 1.33 ± 0.11), but not sensory scores for labor pain during spontaneous delivery. There were no group differences in prepartum pain sensitivity. While PPTs increased through delivery in the CG (clinical CPM), and this PPT change was positively correlated with the experimental CPM (r = 0.55), this was not the case in the TG. The association of ACEs with increased peripartal pain affect and heightened risk for preexisting back pain suggest that such women deserve special care. The dissociation of impaired clinical CPM in women with ACEs and normal prepartum experimental CPM implies at least partly different mechanisms of these 2 manifestations of endogenous pain controls.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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