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Emotional Regulation and Acute Pain Perception in Women

Authors

RUIZ ARANDA, DESIREE, Martin Salguero, Jose , Fernandez-Berrocal, Pablo

External publication

Si

Means

J. Pain

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

4.851

SJR Impact

1.776

Publication date

01/06/2010

ISI

000278876300007

Abstract

Emotional regulation is an important variable in the experience of pain. Currently, there are no experimental investigations of the relation between emotional regulation and pain. The goal of the present study work was to analyze differences in pain perception and mood generated by the cold-pressor (CPT) experimental paradigm in women with high and low emotional regulation. Two groups of women were formed as a function of their level of emotional regulation: women with high emotional repair (N = 24) and women with low emotional repair (N = 28), all of whom performed the CPT. The results show that the women with a high score in emotional repair reported having experienced less sensory pain and affective pain during the immersion, as well as a more positive affective state before beginning the task. During the experimental task, they also reported a better mood, thus displaying lower impact of the experience of pain. Perspective: Emotional regulation is proposed as a key element to manage the emotional reaction that accompanies the experience of acute pain experimentally induced by the CPT experimental paradigm in a sample of healthy women. (C) 2010 by the American Pain Society

Keywords

Emotional regulation; affective state; acute pain; experimental task; cold-pressor

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