Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity

Silvia Metzger, Bogomil Poliakov, Stefan LautenbacherDepartment of Physiological Psychology, University of Bamberg, Bamberg, GermanyBackground: Anxiety has been associated with both increased and decreased pain perception. Rhudy and Meagher (2000) showed that pain sensitivity is enhanced by anxiety...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Metzger S, Poliakov B, Lautenbacher S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Pain Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/differential-effects-of-experimentally-induced-anxiety-and-fear-on-pai-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
id doaj-f2d9b33c58c3439d9f20426641921481
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f2d9b33c58c3439d9f204266419214812020-11-25T01:32:13ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Pain Research1178-70902019-06-01Volume 121791180146335Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivityMetzger SPoliakov BLautenbacher SSilvia Metzger, Bogomil Poliakov, Stefan LautenbacherDepartment of Physiological Psychology, University of Bamberg, Bamberg, GermanyBackground: Anxiety has been associated with both increased and decreased pain perception. Rhudy and Meagher (2000) showed that pain sensitivity is enhanced by anxiety (anticipation of shocks), but diminished by fear (confrontation with shocks). A problem of this approach is the confounding of emotional and attentional effects: Administered shocks (fear induction) divert attention away from pain, which might account for lower pain in this condition. Moreover, heterogeneous findings in the past might be due to inter-individual differences in the proneness to react to anxiety and fear such as ones anxiety sensitivity (AS) level.Objectives: Our aim was to clarify the association between anxiety, fear and pain. We used the NPU paradigm for inducing these emotions and recording pain sensitivity at once with one stimulus to prevent interference by distraction. We assumed that anxiety and fear affect pain differently. Moreover, we hypothesized that subjects with clinically relevant (high) AS (H-AS group) show enhanced pain perception in contrast to low AS subjects (L-AS group).Method: Forty healthy subjects (female: N=20; age M=23.53 years) participated and H-AS or L-AS status was determined by clinically discriminating cut-off scores of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3 (ASI-III). Emotions were induced by the application of unpredictable (anxiety) and predictable (fear) electric stimuli. Pain ratings of electric stimuli were compared between the conditions. Startle reflex and anxiety ratings were recorded.Results: Results showed no general effects of anxiety and fear on pain perception. However, anxiety enhanced pain sensitivity in H-AS subjects, whereas fear did not affect pain sensitivity. In L-AS subjects no effects on pain perception were found.Conclusion: Results revealed that anxiety, not fear, enhanced pain perception but only in subjects with clinically relevant AS levels. This indicates that subclinical AS levels are sufficient to increase pain sensitivity, in uncertain situations.Keywords: anxiety sensitivity index-3, enhanced pain sensitivity, attention effects, electric stimulihttps://www.dovepress.com/differential-effects-of-experimentally-induced-anxiety-and-fear-on-pai-peer-reviewed-article-JPRanxiety sensitivity Index-3enhanced pain sensitivityattention effectselectric stimuli
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Metzger S
Poliakov B
Lautenbacher S
spellingShingle Metzger S
Poliakov B
Lautenbacher S
Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
Journal of Pain Research
anxiety sensitivity Index-3
enhanced pain sensitivity
attention effects
electric stimuli
author_facet Metzger S
Poliakov B
Lautenbacher S
author_sort Metzger S
title Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
title_short Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
title_full Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
title_fullStr Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
title_full_unstemmed Differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
title_sort differential effects of experimentally induced anxiety and fear on pain: the role of anxiety sensitivity
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Pain Research
issn 1178-7090
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Silvia Metzger, Bogomil Poliakov, Stefan LautenbacherDepartment of Physiological Psychology, University of Bamberg, Bamberg, GermanyBackground: Anxiety has been associated with both increased and decreased pain perception. Rhudy and Meagher (2000) showed that pain sensitivity is enhanced by anxiety (anticipation of shocks), but diminished by fear (confrontation with shocks). A problem of this approach is the confounding of emotional and attentional effects: Administered shocks (fear induction) divert attention away from pain, which might account for lower pain in this condition. Moreover, heterogeneous findings in the past might be due to inter-individual differences in the proneness to react to anxiety and fear such as ones anxiety sensitivity (AS) level.Objectives: Our aim was to clarify the association between anxiety, fear and pain. We used the NPU paradigm for inducing these emotions and recording pain sensitivity at once with one stimulus to prevent interference by distraction. We assumed that anxiety and fear affect pain differently. Moreover, we hypothesized that subjects with clinically relevant (high) AS (H-AS group) show enhanced pain perception in contrast to low AS subjects (L-AS group).Method: Forty healthy subjects (female: N=20; age M=23.53 years) participated and H-AS or L-AS status was determined by clinically discriminating cut-off scores of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3 (ASI-III). Emotions were induced by the application of unpredictable (anxiety) and predictable (fear) electric stimuli. Pain ratings of electric stimuli were compared between the conditions. Startle reflex and anxiety ratings were recorded.Results: Results showed no general effects of anxiety and fear on pain perception. However, anxiety enhanced pain sensitivity in H-AS subjects, whereas fear did not affect pain sensitivity. In L-AS subjects no effects on pain perception were found.Conclusion: Results revealed that anxiety, not fear, enhanced pain perception but only in subjects with clinically relevant AS levels. This indicates that subclinical AS levels are sufficient to increase pain sensitivity, in uncertain situations.Keywords: anxiety sensitivity index-3, enhanced pain sensitivity, attention effects, electric stimuli
topic anxiety sensitivity Index-3
enhanced pain sensitivity
attention effects
electric stimuli
url https://www.dovepress.com/differential-effects-of-experimentally-induced-anxiety-and-fear-on-pai-peer-reviewed-article-JPR
work_keys_str_mv AT metzgers differentialeffectsofexperimentallyinducedanxietyandfearonpaintheroleofanxietysensitivity
AT poliakovb differentialeffectsofexperimentallyinducedanxietyandfearonpaintheroleofanxietysensitivity
AT lautenbachers differentialeffectsofexperimentallyinducedanxietyandfearonpaintheroleofanxietysensitivity
_version_ 1725082460397502464