2005
DOI: 10.33776/amc.v31i138.2162
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Utilización de escalas de afrontamiento y parámetros sensoriales en el dolor crónico

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Participants who had fewer catastrophic thoughts (e.g., I feel I cannot stand in anymore, I worry all the time about whether it will end, It's awful and I feel that it overwhelms me) reported lower perceived pain intensity and tolerated the noxious stimulation for a significantly longer time. Similarly, the predictive role of catastrophizing on pain intensity has been observed in studies with chronic pain populations (Cano‐García, Rodríguez‐Franco, García‐Martínez & Antuña‐Bellerín, 2005; Kwissa‐Gajewska, Olesińska & Tomkiewicz, 2014; Lau, Leung & Wong, 2002). In relation to acute pain, the data obtained in our study is congruent with the results presented by (Wang, Jackson & Cai, 2016) who suggested that high levels of catastrophizing were associated with lower pain tolerance during a cold pressor test in a sample of healthy participants.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
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“…Participants who had fewer catastrophic thoughts (e.g., I feel I cannot stand in anymore, I worry all the time about whether it will end, It's awful and I feel that it overwhelms me) reported lower perceived pain intensity and tolerated the noxious stimulation for a significantly longer time. Similarly, the predictive role of catastrophizing on pain intensity has been observed in studies with chronic pain populations (Cano‐García, Rodríguez‐Franco, García‐Martínez & Antuña‐Bellerín, 2005; Kwissa‐Gajewska, Olesińska & Tomkiewicz, 2014; Lau, Leung & Wong, 2002). In relation to acute pain, the data obtained in our study is congruent with the results presented by (Wang, Jackson & Cai, 2016) who suggested that high levels of catastrophizing were associated with lower pain tolerance during a cold pressor test in a sample of healthy participants.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…The participants who applied this strategy, acting as if the pain was not present and focusing on the goal, presented a higher behavioral tolerance threshold, being able to tolerate the painful stimulation for longer, as well as experiencing lower levels of pain intensity during the fixed stimulation time for all participants (45 s). These results are in line with prior research which has suggested that a goal‐focused attitude, without fixating attention on pain and acting “as if pain does not exist” tends to reduce pain intensity levels in patients with chronic pain (Cano‐García et al ., 2005; Kwissa‐Gajewska et al ., 2014). An analysis of the items that make up the scale reveals that the strategy has a double component.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The relationship between the Big Five factors and coping strategies was also confirmed, finding that the most prevalent personality traits considered more adaptive (extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness to experience) showed positive relationships with the more well-adjusted coping strategies and negative relationships with the negative coping strategies. Meanwhile, the neuroticism factor showed the opposite relationship with coping strategies, such that it associated positively with strategies typical of a negative approach and negatively with more adequate ways of managing the stressful event (Cano-García et al, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies have shown the negative role in harmful interpretation of the stressful situation, which could lead to overestimation of risk, and therefore avoiding confrontation with it or avoiding the distress associated with it (Dunkley et al, 2017). On the contrary, a positive affective state in stressful events means that one is active, lively, and alert, and so feels more confident of the ability of an individual to deal with the problem successfully, mainly by choosing active strategies (Cano-García et al, 2007). The relationship between the Big Five factors and coping strategies was also confirmed, finding that the most prevalent personality traits considered more adaptive (extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness to experience) showed positive relationships with the more well-adjusted coping strategies and negative relationships with the negative coping strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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