Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.

The fear-avoidance model provides an explanation for the development of chronic pain, including the role of perception (i.e. pain catastrophism) as an explanatory variable. Recent research has shown that the relationship between pain catastrophism and avoidance is influenced in turn by different psy...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cecilia Peñacoba, Irene López-Gómez, Maria Angeles Pastor-Mira, Sofía López-Roig, Carmen Ecija
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254200
id doaj-a865fc0f141c4c3c939eb64a3b290d02
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a865fc0f141c4c3c939eb64a3b290d022021-07-22T04:30:14ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01167e025420010.1371/journal.pone.0254200Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.Cecilia PeñacobaIrene López-GómezMaria Angeles Pastor-MiraSofía López-RoigCarmen EcijaThe fear-avoidance model provides an explanation for the development of chronic pain, including the role of perception (i.e. pain catastrophism) as an explanatory variable. Recent research has shown that the relationship between pain catastrophism and avoidance is influenced in turn by different psychological and contextual variables, highlighting the affective-motivational ones. From this perspective, the Goal Pursuit Questionnaire (GPQ) was developed to measure the preference for hedonic goals (mood-management or pain-avoidance goals) over achievement goals in musculoskeletal pain patients. Recently, the Spanish version of the GPQ in fibromyalgia patients has been validated. Our aim has been to adapt the Spanish version of GPQ from pain to fatigue symptoms and to validate this new questionnaire (GPQ-F) in fibromyalgia. Despite the recognition of fibromyalgia as a complex disorder and the need for a differential study of its symptoms, fatigue, despite its high prevalence and limiting nature, remains the forgotten symptom. We conducted a cross-sectional study with 231 women with fibromyalgia. Previously, we adapted the Spanish GPQ for fatigue symptoms with three sub-studies (group structured interview, self-administration questionnaire and thinking-aloud; n = 15-27 patients). We explored the GPQ structure and performed path analyses to test conditional mediation relationships. Exploratory factor analysis showed two factors: 'Fatigue-avoidance goal' and 'Mood-management goal' (39.3% and 13.9% of explained variance, respectively). The activity avoidance pattern fully mediated the relation between both catastrophizing and fatigue-avoidance goals with fatigue. The study shows initial findings about the usefulness of the GPQ-F as a tool to analyze goal preferences related to fatigue in fibromyalgia. The results supported the mediational role of activity avoidance patterns in the relationship between preference for fatigue-avoidance goals and fatigue.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254200
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cecilia Peñacoba
Irene López-Gómez
Maria Angeles Pastor-Mira
Sofía López-Roig
Carmen Ecija
spellingShingle Cecilia Peñacoba
Irene López-Gómez
Maria Angeles Pastor-Mira
Sofía López-Roig
Carmen Ecija
Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cecilia Peñacoba
Irene López-Gómez
Maria Angeles Pastor-Mira
Sofía López-Roig
Carmen Ecija
author_sort Cecilia Peñacoba
title Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
title_short Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
title_full Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
title_fullStr Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
title_full_unstemmed Contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. Looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
title_sort contextualizing goal preferences in fear-avoidance models. looking at fatigue as a disabling symptom in fibromyalgia patients.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The fear-avoidance model provides an explanation for the development of chronic pain, including the role of perception (i.e. pain catastrophism) as an explanatory variable. Recent research has shown that the relationship between pain catastrophism and avoidance is influenced in turn by different psychological and contextual variables, highlighting the affective-motivational ones. From this perspective, the Goal Pursuit Questionnaire (GPQ) was developed to measure the preference for hedonic goals (mood-management or pain-avoidance goals) over achievement goals in musculoskeletal pain patients. Recently, the Spanish version of the GPQ in fibromyalgia patients has been validated. Our aim has been to adapt the Spanish version of GPQ from pain to fatigue symptoms and to validate this new questionnaire (GPQ-F) in fibromyalgia. Despite the recognition of fibromyalgia as a complex disorder and the need for a differential study of its symptoms, fatigue, despite its high prevalence and limiting nature, remains the forgotten symptom. We conducted a cross-sectional study with 231 women with fibromyalgia. Previously, we adapted the Spanish GPQ for fatigue symptoms with three sub-studies (group structured interview, self-administration questionnaire and thinking-aloud; n = 15-27 patients). We explored the GPQ structure and performed path analyses to test conditional mediation relationships. Exploratory factor analysis showed two factors: 'Fatigue-avoidance goal' and 'Mood-management goal' (39.3% and 13.9% of explained variance, respectively). The activity avoidance pattern fully mediated the relation between both catastrophizing and fatigue-avoidance goals with fatigue. The study shows initial findings about the usefulness of the GPQ-F as a tool to analyze goal preferences related to fatigue in fibromyalgia. The results supported the mediational role of activity avoidance patterns in the relationship between preference for fatigue-avoidance goals and fatigue.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254200
work_keys_str_mv AT ceciliapenacoba contextualizinggoalpreferencesinfearavoidancemodelslookingatfatigueasadisablingsymptominfibromyalgiapatients
AT irenelopezgomez contextualizinggoalpreferencesinfearavoidancemodelslookingatfatigueasadisablingsymptominfibromyalgiapatients
AT mariaangelespastormira contextualizinggoalpreferencesinfearavoidancemodelslookingatfatigueasadisablingsymptominfibromyalgiapatients
AT sofialopezroig contextualizinggoalpreferencesinfearavoidancemodelslookingatfatigueasadisablingsymptominfibromyalgiapatients
AT carmenecija contextualizinggoalpreferencesinfearavoidancemodelslookingatfatigueasadisablingsymptominfibromyalgiapatients
_version_ 1721292215521640448