Teenage boys who experience 鈥減ersistent鈥 pain aren鈥檛 all that fazed by it 鈥 at least not compared to girls 鈥 a 91亚色 study finds.聽
The study, conducted at the Ontario Science Centre, looked at more than 1,000 children and adolescents from ages聽eight to 18. While boys and girls reported the same frequency of persistent pain 鈥 lasting three months or more 鈥 teenage girls experienced more anxiety and tended to catastrophize over pain to a greater degree than their male peers.聽聽
鈥淏oys who experience pain may feel less comfortable expressing their feelings because they are deemed socially inappropriate 鈥 or it may be that boys simply experience less anxiety in relation to pain,鈥 says study lead author Samantha Fuss (MA 鈥10), a PhD student in psychology at 91亚色. 鈥淓ven teenage girls who haven鈥檛 experienced persistent pain showed significantly higher levels of pain anxiety than boys their age.鈥澛犅犅
Overall, 27 per cent of participants reported experiencing persistent pain. The study is published in the latest issue of the journal .
Study co-author Joel Katz, a 91亚色 psychology professor and , says more research is needed to understand the psychological factors relating to pain in youth.聽
Left: Joel Katz
鈥淧ersistent pain in children and teenagers isn鈥檛 a rare occurrence. There are gaps in our understanding of the time course of pain and the developmental trajectories,鈥 Katz says. 鈥淔or example, how does the presence of pain in these life stages relate to pain in adulthood?鈥
Researchers looked at psychological variables including anxiety, anxiety sensitivity and pain catastrophizing 鈥 a tendency to worry about pain and feel helpless in the face of it.
Boys 12 to 18 years of age were significantly more likely to experience persistent pain than younger boys, while there was no difference between age groups for girls.
Fuss points out that girls more frequently seek medical attention for illness and pain than do boys 鈥 which makes their findings all the more intriguing.
鈥淥ur sample wasn鈥檛 drawn from a clinical setting 鈥 such as interviewing patients at a walk-in clinic,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is a fairly representative sample of Toronto children and adolescents who happened to be visiting the Science Centre with their parents.鈥
Katz notes that the greater prevalence of chronic pain in women versus men may be tied to psychological factors that appear in childhood.
鈥淎nxiety sensitivity is thought to be a vulnerability factor for the development of chronic pain. The finding that girls had higher levels of anxiety sensitivity than boys may partly explain why the prevalence of chronic pain is greater in women than men,鈥 he says.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a complex web to untangle in terms of physical versus psychological,鈥 says Fuss. 鈥淚s it that the psychological experience of pain differs between the sexes 鈥 or even age groups 鈥 or is it differences in the physical experience of pain? How are they linked? These are certainly important questions in terms of diagnosis and pain management.鈥
Fuss鈥 research is supervised by Katz. Their work is funded by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Canada Graduate Scholarship to Fuss, and a Canada Research Chair in Health Psychology to Katz.
Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
