Interoception and social cognition in chronic low back pain: a common inference disturbance? An exploratory study

Author:

Grabli Florent El12ORCID,Quesque François1ORCID,Borg Céline34ORCID,Witthöft Michael5ORCID,Michael George A6ORCID,Lucas Christian2,Pasquier Florence1ORCID,Lebouvier Thibaud1ORCID,Bertoux Maxime1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Inserm, U1172 – CHU Lille, Lille Neuroscience & Cognition, Centre of Excellence in Neurodegenerative Disease, Univ. Lille, Labex DISTAlz, F-59000, Lille, France

2. Centre d’Evaluation et de Traitement de la Douleur, Service de Neurochirurgie, CHU Lille, F-59000, Lille, France

3. Neurology/Neuropsychology CMRR Unit, Hospital Nord, Saint-Priest-en-Jarez, 42270, France

4. Department of Psychology, University of Lyon, Lyon, 69500, France

5. Department of Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Mainz, 55122, Germany

6. Laboratoire d’Etude des Mécanismes Cognitifs (EA 3082), Université Lumière Lyon 2, Bron Cedex, 69676, France

Abstract

Aim: Lower interoceptive abilities are a characteristic of chronic pain conditions. Social support plays an important role in chronic low back pain (cLBP) but social cognitive skills have rarely been investigated. This study aimed to characterize interoceptive and social cognitive abilities in cLBP and to study the relationship between both domains that have been brought closer together by brain predictive coding models. Materials & methods: Twenty-eight patients with cLBP and 74 matched controls were included. Interoceptive accuracy (Heart Beat Perception Task), sensibility/awareness (Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness) and mental-states inference abilities (Mini-Social Cognition and Emotional Assessment) were assessed. Results: cLBP Patients had lower interoceptive accuracy and mentalizing performance. Conclusion: Less efficient interoceptive accuracy and mentalizing abilities were found in cLBP patients without correlation between these performances.

Funder

Région Haut de France

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

General Medicine

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