The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.

OBJECTIVE:The analgesic effect of music has been recognized for pain relief, but individual differences and adjuvant methods are poorly understood. This study employed a cold-pressor task (CPT) to observe the effects of music (without considering personal preferences) on pain experience and how this...

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Main Authors: Suvin Choi, Sang-Gue Park, Hyung-Hwan Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6078312?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a6521ab98311477a889b2f1c5357c5d72020-11-25T02:47:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01138e020189710.1371/journal.pone.0201897The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.Suvin ChoiSang-Gue ParkHyung-Hwan LeeOBJECTIVE:The analgesic effect of music has been recognized for pain relief, but individual differences and adjuvant methods are poorly understood. This study employed a cold-pressor task (CPT) to observe the effects of music (without considering personal preferences) on pain experience and how this is affected by individuals' general (and pain-specific) anxiety symptomology. METHODS:Fifty participants were each presented with three conditions (randomized into different orders): music-listening, news-listening, and no sound (control). Pain responses, including pain tolerance time (PT), pain intensity (PI), and pain unpleasantness (PU), were assessed using CPT and compared with a 3x3 crossover design. Participants also completed the anxiety sensitivity index (ASI-16) and pain anxiety symptom scale (PASS-20). RESULTS:CPT pain responses during the music intervention were significantly different from responses during the news intervention and control conditions, respectively. Among participants with normal anxiety levels, pain responses during the music condition differed significantly from the news and control groups; this was not the case for the anxiety risk group. Pain responses during the music condition for those with normal levels of pain-specific anxiety differed significantly from the control, but this was not the case for the risk group. CONCLUSIONS:Music appears to influence diminished pain responses relative to the absence of an intervention. However, this was not the case when individuals listened to news stories. These effects were more robust for individuals experiencing normal levels of general and pain-specific anxiety. Thus, music (even outside one's own preferences) was an effective adjuvant method for managing pain, especially among those without significant anxiety symptomology.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6078312?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suvin Choi
Sang-Gue Park
Hyung-Hwan Lee
spellingShingle Suvin Choi
Sang-Gue Park
Hyung-Hwan Lee
The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Suvin Choi
Sang-Gue Park
Hyung-Hwan Lee
author_sort Suvin Choi
title The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
title_short The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
title_full The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
title_fullStr The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
title_full_unstemmed The analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: The influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
title_sort analgesic effect of music on cold pressor pain responses: the influence of anxiety and attitude toward pain.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description OBJECTIVE:The analgesic effect of music has been recognized for pain relief, but individual differences and adjuvant methods are poorly understood. This study employed a cold-pressor task (CPT) to observe the effects of music (without considering personal preferences) on pain experience and how this is affected by individuals' general (and pain-specific) anxiety symptomology. METHODS:Fifty participants were each presented with three conditions (randomized into different orders): music-listening, news-listening, and no sound (control). Pain responses, including pain tolerance time (PT), pain intensity (PI), and pain unpleasantness (PU), were assessed using CPT and compared with a 3x3 crossover design. Participants also completed the anxiety sensitivity index (ASI-16) and pain anxiety symptom scale (PASS-20). RESULTS:CPT pain responses during the music intervention were significantly different from responses during the news intervention and control conditions, respectively. Among participants with normal anxiety levels, pain responses during the music condition differed significantly from the news and control groups; this was not the case for the anxiety risk group. Pain responses during the music condition for those with normal levels of pain-specific anxiety differed significantly from the control, but this was not the case for the risk group. CONCLUSIONS:Music appears to influence diminished pain responses relative to the absence of an intervention. However, this was not the case when individuals listened to news stories. These effects were more robust for individuals experiencing normal levels of general and pain-specific anxiety. Thus, music (even outside one's own preferences) was an effective adjuvant method for managing pain, especially among those without significant anxiety symptomology.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6078312?pdf=render
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