TY - JOUR
T1 - Pain Perception and Modulation in Ex-POWs Who Underwent Torture
T2 - The Role of Subjective and Objective Suffering
AU - Tsur, Noga
AU - Defrin, Ruth
AU - Levin, Yafit
AU - Itzhaky, Liat
AU - Solomon, Zahava
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Psychological Association.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Objective: Previous findings have demonstrated that torture survivors exhibit chronic pain and alterations in pain perception. However, not much is known regarding the characteristics of the torture experience and its contribution to these long-term ramifications. The current study examined the unique role of objective severity and subjective suffering in torture in predicting chronic pain and acute pain perception and pain modulation. Method: Eighteen years after war, 59 former prisoners of war who were subjected to severe torture in captivity were assessed for subjective suffering in torture and estimated weight loss during captivity (an indication of torture severity) using self-administered questionnaires. Thirty-five years after captivity, systemic quantitative somatosensory testing was conducted, which included the measurement of pain threshold, pain tolerance, conditioned pain modulation, and perceived suprathreshold stimuli. Self-administered questionnaires were also used to evaluate chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorder. Results: The findings indicated that subjective suffering was associated with pain threshold, conditioned pain modulation, perceived suprathreshold stimuli, and chronic pain while controlling for posttraumatic stress symptoms. Estimated weight loss was associated only with pain threshold. Conclusion: The findings demonstrate that the experience of chronic and acute pain is rooted in the subjective perception of traumatic experiences.
AB - Objective: Previous findings have demonstrated that torture survivors exhibit chronic pain and alterations in pain perception. However, not much is known regarding the characteristics of the torture experience and its contribution to these long-term ramifications. The current study examined the unique role of objective severity and subjective suffering in torture in predicting chronic pain and acute pain perception and pain modulation. Method: Eighteen years after war, 59 former prisoners of war who were subjected to severe torture in captivity were assessed for subjective suffering in torture and estimated weight loss during captivity (an indication of torture severity) using self-administered questionnaires. Thirty-five years after captivity, systemic quantitative somatosensory testing was conducted, which included the measurement of pain threshold, pain tolerance, conditioned pain modulation, and perceived suprathreshold stimuli. Self-administered questionnaires were also used to evaluate chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorder. Results: The findings indicated that subjective suffering was associated with pain threshold, conditioned pain modulation, perceived suprathreshold stimuli, and chronic pain while controlling for posttraumatic stress symptoms. Estimated weight loss was associated only with pain threshold. Conclusion: The findings demonstrate that the experience of chronic and acute pain is rooted in the subjective perception of traumatic experiences.
KW - Chronic pain
KW - Ex-prisoner of war
KW - Pain perception
KW - Torture
KW - Trauma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85060921268&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1037/tra0000437
DO - 10.1037/tra0000437
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C2 - 30688507
AN - SCOPUS:85060921268
SN - 1942-9681
JO - Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
JF - Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
ER -