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Article

Memory for pain? A comparison of nonexperiential estimates and patients' reports of the quality and intensity of postoperative pain

Details

Citation

Terry R, Niven C, Brodie E, Jones RB & Prowse MA (2008) Memory for pain? A comparison of nonexperiential estimates and patients' reports of the quality and intensity of postoperative pain. Journal of Pain, 9 (4), pp. 342-349. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2007.11.008

Abstract
Prior research has questioned the extent to which postoperative retrospective ratings of acute pain actually reflect memory of that pain. To investigate this issue, pain ratings provided by patients who had undergone vascular surgery were compared with estimates of this pain provided by 2 groups of healthy, nonpatient participants with no personal experience of the surgery. Patient participants rated postoperative pain while actually experiencing it and again 4 to 6 weeks after surgery. Nonpatient groups read either a comprehensive information leaflet describing postoperative pain after vascular surgery, or a short general information leaflet about the surgery and provided 2 estimates of the likely nature of the pain, 4 to 6 weeks apart. Compared with patients, both nonpatient groups overestimated pain severity, and nonpatients provided with the comprehensive information leaflet were less consistent in their estimates compared with the other 2 groups. However, qualitative descriptions of the pain provided by the 3 groups shared many similarities. Our findings highlight limitations of inferring pain memory accuracy by comparing ratings given while in pain with those provided retrospectively and demonstrate the need to consider the phenomenological awareness accompanying recollections of prior pain events to advance our understanding of memory for pain.

Keywords
3; ACCURACY; Awareness; description; EVENT; experience; EXTENT; Information; INTENSITY; INVESTIGATE; LIMITATIONS; memories; Memory; NEED; other; Pain; PARTICIPANTS; patient; Patients; POSTOPERATIVE pain; qualitative; QUALITY; Rating; recollection; Research; severity; similarity; SURGERY; understanding; WHO

Journal
Journal of Pain: Volume 9, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2008
PublisherCHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
Place of publicationEDINBURGH, SCOTLAND
ISSN1526-5900