» Articles » PMID: 27463940

Child Attention to Pain and Pain Tolerance Are Dependent Upon Anxiety and Attention Control: An Eye-tracking Study

Overview
Journal Eur J Pain
Publisher Wiley
Date 2016 Jul 28
PMID 27463940
Citations 16
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Pain is common and can be debilitating in childhood. Theoretical models propose that attention to pain plays a key role in pain outcomes, however, very little research has investigated this in youth. This study examined how anxiety-related variables and attention control interacted to predict children's attention to pain cues using eye-tracking methodology, and their pain tolerance on the cold pressor test (CPT).

Methods: Children aged 8-17 years had their eye-gaze tracked whilst they viewed photographs of other children displaying painful facial expressions during the CPT, before completing the CPT themselves. Children also completed self-report measures of anxiety and attention control.

Results: Findings indicated that anxiety and attention control did not impact children's initial fixations on pain or neutral faces, but did impact how long they dwelled on pain versus neutral faces. For children reporting low levels of attention control, higher anxiety was associated with less dwell time on pain faces as opposed to neutral faces, and the opposite pattern was observed for children with high attention control. Anxiety and attention control also interacted to predict pain outcomes. For children with low attention control, increasing anxiety was associated with anticipating more pain and tolerating pain for less time.

Conclusions: This is the first study to examine children's attention to pain cues using eye-tracking technology in the context of a salient painful experience. Data suggest that attention control is an important moderator of anxiety on multiple outcomes relevant to young people's pain experiences.

Significance: This study uses eye tracking to study attention to pain cues in children. Attention control is an important moderator of anxiety on attention bias to pain and tolerance of cold pressor pain in youth.

Citing Articles

Transferable lessons for care provided to children with intellectual and developmental disabilities based on an analysis of facilitators and barriers to SARS-CoV-2 testing.

Gotto G, Bohall J, Northrup R, Errichetti C, Chiang D, van Stone M Front Pediatr. 2024; 12:1449255.

PMID: 39588280 PMC: 11586190. DOI: 10.3389/fped.2024.1449255.


Nonpharmacological interventions for managing postoperative pain and anxiety in children: a randomized controlled trial.

Mathias E, Pai M, Kumar V, Narayanakurup D, Kulkarni M, Guddattu V Clin Exp Pediatr. 2024; 67(12):677-685.

PMID: 39483045 PMC: 11621737. DOI: 10.3345/cep.2023.01690.


Painful Experiences in Social Contexts Facilitate Sensitivity to Emotional Signals of Pain from Conspecifics in Laboratory Rats.

Nakashima S, Ukezono M, Takano Y Animals (Basel). 2024; 14(9).

PMID: 38731284 PMC: 11083382. DOI: 10.3390/ani14091280.


Youth baseline and state pain-related injustice appraisals are associated with emotional responses of anger and sadness: An experimental study.

Daenen F, Wauters A, Van Ryckeghem D, Trost Z, Vervoort T Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2023; 4:1080461.

PMID: 37151841 PMC: 10160631. DOI: 10.3389/fpain.2023.1080461.


Painful reminders: Involvement of the autobiographical memory system in pediatric postsurgical pain and the transition to chronicity.

Waisman A, Pavlova M, Noel M, Katz J Can J Pain. 2022; 6(2):121-141.

PMID: 35692557 PMC: 9176239. DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2022.2058474.