Nociplastic Pain and Pain-Motivated Drinking in Alcohol Use Disorder

The Journal of Pain(2024)

引用 0|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
Heavy chronic alcohol use may produce pain amplification through neurochemical and neuroplastic changes at multiple levels of the nervous system. Similar changes are thought to underlie nociplastic pain. The American College of Rheumatology Fibromyalgia Survey has been used as a surrogate for nociplastic pain, including among individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD). However, studies linking nociplastic pain to pain-motivated drinking are lacking. The present study aimed to determine if nociplastic pain is associated with pain-motivated drinking in AUD. To achieve this aim, a new scale—the Pain-Motivated Drinking Scale (PMDS)—was developed to measure how often participants were motivated by pain to drink alcohol. Measurement properties of this new scale were determined, including its factor structure, internal consistency reliability, and construct validity. In this cross-sectional observational study, participants with AUD (n = 138) were consecutively recruited from the patient pool at an academic addiction treatment facility. Seventy-two percent (95, 72.0%) reported they drank alcohol “to get relief from physical pain” at least some of the time, and over forty-two percent (56, 42.4%) reported pain relief motivated their drinking at least half of the time. PMDS had a single-factor structure, strong internal consistency reliability, and construct validity. A multiple hierarchical linear regression was run to determine if nociplastic pain was associated with pain-motivated drinking. Nociplastic pain was associated with PMDS even after controlling for potential confounders and pain severity. These findings suggest nociplastic pain is uniquely associated with pain-motivated drinking in AUD.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Central nervous system sensitization,Alcoholism,Alcohol-related disorders,Fibromyalgia,Chronic pain
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要