Ethnic Differences in Pain Tolerance: Clinical Implications in a Chronic Pain Population
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Psychosomatic Medicine
- Vol. 63 (2), 316-323
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006842-200103000-00018
Abstract
Although numerous studies have independently examined ethnic differences in clinical and experimental pain, few have investigated differences in both sensitivity to controlled noxious stimuli and clinical pain reports in the same sample. The present experiment examined the effects of ethnicity (African American vs. white) on experimental pain tolerance and adjustment to chronic pain. Three hundred thirty-seven (68 African American and 269 white) patients with chronic pain referred to a multidisciplinary treatment center participated in the study. In addition to completing a number of standardized questionnaires assessing adjustment to chronic pain, participants underwent a submaximal effort tourniquet procedure. This experimental pain procedure yields a measure of tolerance for a controlled noxious stimulus (ie, arm ischemia). African American subjects reported higher levels of clinical pain as well as greater pain-related disability than white participants. In addition, substantial group differences were observed for ischemic pain tolerance, with African Americans demonstrating less tolerance than whites. Correlational analyses revealed a small but significant inverse relationship between ischemic pain tolerance and the reported severity of chronic pain. Collectively these findings support previous research revealing ethnic differences in responses to both clinical and experimental pain. Moreover, the present results suggest that enhanced sensitivity to noxious stimuli on the part of African Americans may be associated with ethnic differences in reported clinical pain, although the magnitude of ethnic differences was much greater for ischemic pain tolerance than for clinical pain measures.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patients’ Perceptions of Overall Function, Pain, and Appearance After Primary Posterior Instrumentation and Fusion for Idiopathic ScoliosisSpine, 1999
- Glaucoma’s impact on quality of life and its relation to clinical indicatorsOphthalmology, 1998
- Pain in ambulatory AIDS patients. I: Pain characteristics and medical correlatesPain, 1996
- Ethnic comparability of the MMPI in pain patientsJournal of Clinical Psychology, 1996
- Variation in migraine prevalence by raceNeurology, 1996
- Association between CMD signs and symptoms, oral parafunctions, race and sex, in 4–6‐year‐old African‐American and Caucasian childrenJournal of Oral Rehabilitation, 1995
- Differences in postoperative pain severity among four ethnic groupsJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1994
- Social science and the study of pain since Zborowski: A need for a new agendaSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- Ethnic and Sex Differences in Response to Clinical and Induced Pain in Chronic Spinal Pain PatientsSpine, 1984
- Cultural Components in Responses to Pain1Journal of Social Issues, 1952