Affiliation:
1. Centre of Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain, School of Sport, Exercise, and Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Abstract
Background: Although the reliability of pain drawings (PDs) has been confirmed in people
with chronic pain, there is a lack of evidence about the validity of the PD, that is, does the PD
accurately represent the pain experience of the patient?
Objectives: We investigate whether people with chronic neck pain (CNP) can recognize their
own PD to support the validity of the PD in reporting the experience of pain. Moreover, we
examined the association between their ability to recognize their own PD with their levels of
pain intensity and disability and extent of psychosocial and somatic features.
Study Design: Experimental.
Setting: University Laboratory.
Methods: Individuals with CNP completed their PD on a digital body chart, which was then
automatically modified with specific dimensions using a novel software, providing an objective
range of distortion and eliminating errors, which could potentially occur in manually controlled
visual-subjective based methods. Following a 10-minute break listening to music, a series of
20 PDs were presented to each patient in a random order, with only 2 being their original PD.
For each PD, the patients rated its likeliness to their own original PD on a scale from 0 to 100,
with 100 representing “this is my pain.”
Results: Overall, the patients rated their original PD with a median score of 92% similarity,
followed by 91.8% and 89.5% similarity when presented with a PD scaled down to 75%
and scaled up by 150% of the original size, respectively; these scores were not significantly
different to the ratings given for their original PD. The PD with horizontal translation by 40
pixels (8%) and vertical translation by 70 pixels (12.8%) were rated as the most dissimilar
to their original PD; these scores were significantly different to their original PD scores. The
Spearman correlation coefficient revealed a significant negative association between their
ability to recognize their original PD and their Modified Somatic Perceptions Questionnaire
scores.
Limitations: The patients in the study presented with relatively mild CNP, and the results may
not be generalized to those with more severe symptoms.
Conclusions: People with CNP are generally able to identify their own PD but that their ability
to recognize their original PD is negatively correlated with the extent of somatic awareness.
Key words: Chronic pain, perception, pain drawings, somatic awareness
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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