| Literature DB >> 36171845 |
Roja T Meda1, Surya P Nuguru2, Sriker Rachakonda3, Shravani Sripathi4, Mashal I Khan5, Naomi Patel6.
Abstract
Chronic pain is ongoing pain that has persisted beyond standard tissue healing time along with comorbidities such as depression. This article discusses studies that have shown the prevalence of chronic pain and chronic pain-induced depression and explained methods of prevention for these conditions. The molecular mechanisms such as monoamine neurotransmitters, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, inflammatory factors, and glutamate that are similar in chronic pain and depression have also been discussed. This article reviews the methods of management that utilize the identification of these molecular mechanisms to treat this condition further. It also emphasizes the importance of the awareness of chronic pain-induced depression for the upcoming advances in the subject of mental health.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pain; chronic pain and depression; chronic pain induced depression; chronic pain induced depression management; depression; depression in chronic illness; management of depression in chronic illness; pharmacological management of chronic pain; prevalence of chronic pain
Year: 2022 PMID: 36171845 PMCID: PMC9509520 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.28416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Risk factors for chronic pain
| Factors | |
| Demographic | Age, ethnicity, socio-economic background, gender |
| Lifestyle and behavior | Physical activity, smoking, alcohol, eating habits |
| Clinical | Mental health, weight gain, surgical and medical interventions |
| Other | Preconceived notions about pain, history of violence or abuse |
Prevalence of depression in patients with chronic pain
| Clinic | Percent prevalence |
| Pain clinic/inpatient pain programs | 52% (1.5%-100%) |
| Psychiatric clinics | 38% (6%-64%) |
| Orthopedic clinics/rheumatology clinics | 56% (21%-89%) |
| Dental clinics focusing on facial pain | 85% (35%-100%) |
| Gynecology clinics focusing on chronic pelvic pain in laparoscopy patients | 13% (12%-17%) |
| Population based settings | 18% (4.7%-22%) |
| Primary care clinics | 27% (5.9%-46%) |
Figure 1Treatment for chronic pain-induced depression
MAO: monoamine oxidase
Image credit: Roja Meda
Summary of studies exploring the prevalence and treatment of chronic pain-induced depression
SNRIs: serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; BrdU: bromodeoxyuridine; CBT: cognitive behavioral therapy; MDD: major depressive disorder; HDAC: histone deacetylase; VAS: visual analog scale
| Reference | Study Type | Population | Conclusion |
| Alhalal et al. (2021) [ | Cross-sectional study | 233 chronic pain patients | Pain disability showed a significant prediction of depression, 36% of the patients had depression |
| Ma et al. (2021) [ | Cross-sectional study | 15,213 individuals from the 2015 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study | Increased severity of pain increased the likelihood of the individuals developing depression |
| Ferreira et al. (2020) [ | Systematic review | 5318 participants | Moderate evidence that SNRIs decreased back pain in patients |
| Schäfer et al. (2020) [ | Narrative review | Physical activity has a positive effect on the prevention of chronic pain | |
| Yalcin and Barrot (2019) [ | Review | Population of Denmark, United States, and Spain | Elevated frequency of suicidal deaths in patients with fibromyalgia |
| Duric and McCarson (2019) [ | Randomized control trial | Rodents | Reduction in BrdU positive cells in rodents after exposure to long periods of stress |
| Fisher et al. (2017) [ | Review | 27 clinical trials with children and adolescents | Psychotherapy reduced chronic headache in children and adolescents |
| Cherkin et al. (2017) [ | Randomized clinical trial | 342 patients between 20 and 70 years | Patients given CBT had greater improvement in function |
| Scherrer et al. (2016) [ | Cohort study | Three American health systems’ data (Veterans Health database, Baylor Scott and White Health, and the Henry Ford Health System) | 18% increase in risk for depression in patients taking opioids for 31-90 days than patients taking opioids for 1-30 days |
| Descalzi et al. (2015) [ | Review | Mice | Removal of HDAC5 reduced depression-like behaviors in mice |
| Dureja et al. (2014) [ | Epidemiological study | 5004 respondents from India | Patients with chronic pain found it difficult to keep an independent lifestyle |
| Annagür et al. (2014) [ | SCID-based prospective study | 108 pain outpatient clinic patients at the Selcuk University aged 18-56 years | 49.1% prevalence of depression in chronic pain patients |
| Proctor et al. (2013) [ | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 216 chronic pain patients in a neurodiagnostic clinic in the United States | 44.4% prevalence of depression in chronic pain patients |
| Kassam and Patten (2006) [ | Cross-sectional study | 115.160 Canadian adults | Prevalence of MDD in patients with fibromyalgia was almost three times more than in subjects without it |
| Rowbotham et. Al (2005) [ | Randomized clinical trial | 47 neuropathic pain patients | Pain relief was seen in 53%-80% of the participants |
| Bair et al. (2003) [ | Literature Review | Chronic pain patients from various clinics | Increase of lifetime prevalence of depression in chronic pain patients from 12% to 32% and from 32.4% to 56.8% |
| Shimodozono et al. (2002) [ | Open label study | 31 patients with central poststroke pain | Significant improvement in the VAS and Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale in the patients |