In the current issue of the Scandinavian Journal of Pain, Berit Østerås, Hermundur Sigmundsson and Monika Haga investigates for potential gender differences in the relationship between pain and perceived stress in adolescents, and present interesting findings [1]. Females, both adolescent and adults, report more pain, psychosocial problems and mental health problems than males. On that note some might consider females to be more vulnerable; that stress and adverse life events to a larger extent influence physical complaints in females. However, in spite of higher reports of pain and stress in females, Østerås et al. find pain to be equally related to stress in male and female adolescents.
1 The relationship between pain and stress in adolescents - what do we know?
Adolescence may be a stressful period and several psychosocial difficulties are associated with adolescent physical complaints, including pain [2]. The high prevalence of physical complaints in adolescents is considered to be possible manifestations of psychosocial problems [3]. Studies in adolescents have shown a strong relationship between pain and mental health problems, primarily anxiety and depressive symptoms [2]. Well known risk factors of mental health disorders, as stress and adverse life events [4], are less studied factors in relation to pain. However, 0steras et al. recently published findings that showed a clear association between adolescent pain and perceived stress [5], supporting previous studies showing a relationship between pain and stress in adolescents [6]-[9].
2 Stress in youth - a turn for the worse?
Adolescence has always been a challenging period with changes and developments on many levels. Through media exposure we get the impression that adolescents today experience high levels of pressure to succeed through social, academic and peer related stress [10,11]. Whether this perceived trend is due to a more challenging adolescent period than before is uncertain. Growing up in other historical periods has surely also been difficult. However, the Norwegian HEMIL-report provides some support to this notion on a short term scale, showing a 73% increase in adolescent reports of substantial school-related stress from 1997 to 2012 [12]. A Finnish adolescent study show increased pain reports in the last decades [13]. One can question if this is related to an increase in adolescent stress, due to the current evidence of the relationship between adolescent pain and stress [1,5-9].
Never the less, the perceived stress is related to pain and other physical complaints [1,5-11], which in turn may lead to contact with health services. These adolescents can range from highly capable youth struggling with daily stressors and expectations, to youth struggling with serious mental health disorders.
3 The relationship between pain and perceived stress in adolescents is not gender specific
Østerås et al. found pain complaints and perceived stress to be common in both genders, but females are significantly more troubled [1]. This is supportive of known knowledge. In total, 8.5% of the adolescents reported multisite pain (≥3 pain sites), and 21.7% were moderately to severely stressed, defined by the Perceived stress questionnaire (PSQ≥0.45) [1].
The main finding done by Østerås et al. is that the relationship between pain and stress is equally strong in both males and females (Fig. 1). That stress is an important factor related to pain in both genders, alongside adverse life events and mental health problems is supported by a previous study [6]. An improvement to previous studies examining the relationship between pain and stress in adolescents [6-9], is the use of a validated measure of stress, the Perceived stress questionnaire [1,5]. Another strength of the study is the use of different pain measurements, including pain sites, pain duration and pain intensity. Perceived stress was significantly associated with all three aspects of pain, in both genders (Fig. 1).
![Fig. 1
The correlation between perceived stress and pain in male and female adolescents (figure based on results presented by Østerås et al. [1]).](/document/doi/10.1016/j.sjpain.2016.05.003/asset/graphic/j_j.sjpain.2016.05.003_fig_001.jpg)
The correlation between perceived stress and pain in male and female adolescents (figure based on results presented by Østerås et al. [1]).
In recent years there has been an increased focus on multisite or widespread pain, which is more strongly associated with psychosocial and mental health problems than single-site pain is [6,14]. Østerås et al. present similar findings showing an increasing degree of stress in relation to the increasing number of adolescent pain sites [1]. Multiple pains might be an easier clinical marker of psychosocial problems than the subjective degree of pain.
The cross-sectional design of the study does not allow the authors to explore any causal direction between perceived stress and pain. There is a lack of longitudinal studies examining for a relationship between daily stressors and pain, which should be examined further.
4 Conclusion and implications
Expectations and pressure to succeed with subsequent stress seems to increase in Scandinavian youth. The most important finding in the current study is that pain complaints are equally related to perceived stress in male and female adolescent. The study adds to the evidence of a relationship between stress and pain, contributing to the multifactorial understanding of pain. Future research should seek to examine for a temporal relationship between stress and pain in adolescents. Health practitioners should be attentive to psychosocial problems in both male and female adolescents troubled with multiple or recurrent pains.
DOI of refers to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sjpain.2016.05.038.
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Conflict of interest: None declared.
References
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© 2016 Scandinavian Association for the Study of Pain
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Scandinavian Journal of Pain
- Editorial comment
- Depressive symptoms associated with poor outcome after lumbar spine surgery: Pain and depression impact on each other and aggravate the burden of the sufferer
- Clinical pain research
- Depressive symptoms are associated with poor outcome for lumbar spine surgery
- Editorial comment
- Chronic compartment syndrome is an under-recognized cause of leg-pain
- Observational study
- Prevalence of chronic compartment syndrome of the legs: Implications for clinical diagnostic criteria and therapy
- Editorial comment
- Genetic susceptibility to postherniotomy pain. The influence of polymorphisms in the Mu opioid receptor, TNF-α, GRIK3, GCH1, BDNF and CACNA2D2 genes
- Clinical pain research
- Genetic susceptibility to postherniotomy pain. The influence of polymorphisms in the Mu opioid receptor, TNF-α, GRIK3, GCH1, BDNF and CACNA2D2 genes
- Editorial comment
- Important development: Extended Acute Pain Service for patients at high risk of chronic pain after surgery
- Observational study
- New approach for treatment of prolonged postoperative pain: APS Out-Patient Clinic
- Editorial comment
- Working memory, optimism and pain: An elusive link
- Original experimental
- The effects of experimental pain and induced optimism on working memory task performance
- Editorial comment
- A surgical treatment for chronic neck pain after whiplash injury?
- Clinical pain research
- A small group Whiplash-Associated-Disorders (WAD) patients with central neck pain and movement induced stabbing pain, the painful segment determined by mechanical provocation: Fusion surgery was superior to multimodal rehabilitation in a randomized trial
- Editorial comment
- Social anxiety and pain-related fear impact each other and aggravate the burden of chronic pain patients: More individually tailored rehabilitation need
- Clinical pain research
- Characteristics and consequences of the co-occurrence between social anxiety and pain-related fear in chronic pain patients receiving multimodal pain rehabilitation treatment
- Editorial comment
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation, paravertebral muscles training, and postural control in chronic low back pain
- Original experimental
- Influence of paravertebral muscles training on brain plasticity and postural control in chronic low back pain
- Editorial comment
- Is there a place for pulsed radiofrequency in the treatment of chronic pain?
- Clinical pain research
- Pulsed radiofrequency in clinical practice – A retrospective analysis of 238 patients with chronic non-cancer pain treated at an academic tertiary pain centre
- Editorial comment
- More postoperative pain reported by women than by men – Again
- Observational study
- Females report higher postoperative pain scores than males after ankle surgery
- Editorial comment
- The relationship between pain and perceived stress in a population-based sample of adolescents – Is the relationship gender specific?
- Observational study
- Pain is prevalent among adolescents and equally related to stress across genders
- Editorial comment
- The Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) – Revisited and rejuvenated?
- Clinical pain research
- Confirmatory factor analysis of 2 versions of the Brief Pain Inventory in an ambulatory population indicates that sleep interference should be interpreted separately
- Editorial comment
- Pain research reported at the 40th scientific meeting of the Scandinavian Association for the Study of Pain in Reykjavik, Iceland May 26–27, 2016
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- Pain management strategies for effective coping with Sickle Cell Disease: The perspective of patients in Ghana
- Abstracts
- PEARL – Pain in early life. A new network for research and education
- Abstracts
- Searching for protein biomarkers in pain medicine – Mindless dredging or rational fishing?
- Abstracts
- Effectiveness of smart tablets as a distraction during needle insertion amongst children with port catheter: Pre-research with pre-post test design
- Abstracts
- Postoperative oxycodone in breast cancer surgery: What factors associate with analgesic plasma concentrations?
- Abstracts
- Sport participation and physical activity level in relation to musculoskeletal pain in a population-based sample of adolescents: The Young-HUNT Study
- Abstracts
- “Tears are also included” - women’s experience of treatment for painful endometriosis at a pain clinic
- Abstracts
- Predictors of long-term opioid use among chronic nonmalignant pain patients: A register-based national open cohort study
- Abstracts
- Coupled cell networks of astrocytes and chondrocytes are target cells of inflammation
- Abstracts
- Changes in opioid prescribing behaviour in Denmark, Sweden and Norway - 2006-2014
- Abstracts
- Opioid usage in Denmark, Norway and Sweden - 2006-2014 and regulatory factors in the society that might influence it
- Abstracts
- ADRB2, pain and opioids in mice and man
- Abstracts
- Retrospective analysis of pediatric patients with CRPS
- Abstracts
- Activation of epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFRs) following disc herniation induces hyperexcitability in the pain pathways
- Abstracts
- Pain rehabilitation with language interpreter, a multicenter development project
- Abstracts
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- Abstracts
- Emla®-cream as pain relief during pneumococcal vaccination
- Abstracts
- Use of Complimentary/Alternative therapy for chronic pain
- Abstracts
- Effect of conditioned pain modulation on long-term potentiation-like pain amplification in humans
- Abstracts
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- Abstracts
- Acute bilateral experimental neck pain: Reorganise axioscapular and trunk muscle activity during slow resisted arm movements
- Abstracts
- Mast cell proteases protect against histaminergic itch and attenuate tissue injury pain responses
- Abstracts
- The impact of opioid treatment on regional gastrointestinal transit
- Abstracts
- Genetic variation in P2RX7 and pain
- Abstracts
- Reversal of thermal and mechanical allodynia with pregabalin in a mouse model of oxaliplatin-induced peripheral neuropathy
- Clinical pain research
- Pain-related distress and clinical depression in chronic pain: A comparison between two measures