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Research has shown clearly that
reported level or intensity of pain sensation varies according to a number of affective
elements. For example, depressed mood is associated with increased processing of
negatively evaluated events. There is selective recall of unpleasant events and current
circumstances are rated less positively than they are among non-depressed persons. A
stimulus is more likely to be rated as painful and as more intensely painful by depressed
compared to non-depressed people. The problem is amplified because persons in pain quickly
become depressed and this compounds the intensification of the “painfulness” of the
experience. Anxiety also exacerbates the experience of pain. This seems to involve a
different mechanism to that in depression. Anxiety is associated with the anticipation of
harm and there is a tendency to tense or protect a painful body part from stimulation.
This anxiety/fear leads to hyper-responsiveness to stimulation, which is experienced as an
intensification of pain.. Even when there is no additional stimulation, pain is reported
as being more intense among people reporting higher levels of anxiety than those reporting
lower levels of anxiety. |