Stress and pain are interleaved at multiple levels - interacting and influencing each other. Both are modulated by psychosocial factors including fears, beliefs, and goals, and are served by overlapping neural substrates. One major contributing factor in the development and maintenance of chronic pain is threat learning, with pain as an emotionally-salient threat – or stressor. Here, we argue that threat learning is a central mechanism and contributor, mediating the relationship between stress and chronic pain. We review the state of the art on (mal)adaptive learning in chronic pain, and on effects of stress and particularly cortisol on learning. We then provide a theoretical integration of how stress may affect chronic pain through its eff...
Chronic pain is one of the major health problems in Western societies, with a prevalence of 19%. Not...
Human fear conditioning research since Watson's case study on "Little Albert" has vastly evolved and...
Stress and sensitization are central concepts in chronic pain. Both can be a consequence and a contr...
Stress and pain are interleaved at multiple levels - interacting and influencing each other. Both ar...
Background: Associative learning is the theory that two stimuli can be paired to produce similar beh...
Pain and stress share significant conceptual and physiological overlaps. Both phenomena challenge th...
Acute pain informs the individual that there is an imminent threat of body damage, and is associated...
Learning to predict and control harmful events: chronic pain and conditioning Johan W.S. Vlaeyena,b,...
Pain is essential for avoidance of tissue damage and for promotion of healing. Notwithstanding the s...
Niklaus Egloff,1 Anna Hirschi,2 Roland von Känel1 1Department of General Internal Medicine, Div...
Stress and pain symptoms are extremely common and can have negative consequences on a personal, soci...
Pain is a biologically relevant signal and response to bodily threat, associated with the urge to re...
Pain is a primary symptom driving patients to seek physical therapy, and its attenu-ation commonly d...
Pain is a biologically relevant signal and response to bodily threat, associated with the urge to re...
This study investigated the effects of a threatening and a safe social context on learning pain-rela...
Chronic pain is one of the major health problems in Western societies, with a prevalence of 19%. Not...
Human fear conditioning research since Watson's case study on "Little Albert" has vastly evolved and...
Stress and sensitization are central concepts in chronic pain. Both can be a consequence and a contr...
Stress and pain are interleaved at multiple levels - interacting and influencing each other. Both ar...
Background: Associative learning is the theory that two stimuli can be paired to produce similar beh...
Pain and stress share significant conceptual and physiological overlaps. Both phenomena challenge th...
Acute pain informs the individual that there is an imminent threat of body damage, and is associated...
Learning to predict and control harmful events: chronic pain and conditioning Johan W.S. Vlaeyena,b,...
Pain is essential for avoidance of tissue damage and for promotion of healing. Notwithstanding the s...
Niklaus Egloff,1 Anna Hirschi,2 Roland von Känel1 1Department of General Internal Medicine, Div...
Stress and pain symptoms are extremely common and can have negative consequences on a personal, soci...
Pain is a biologically relevant signal and response to bodily threat, associated with the urge to re...
Pain is a primary symptom driving patients to seek physical therapy, and its attenu-ation commonly d...
Pain is a biologically relevant signal and response to bodily threat, associated with the urge to re...
This study investigated the effects of a threatening and a safe social context on learning pain-rela...
Chronic pain is one of the major health problems in Western societies, with a prevalence of 19%. Not...
Human fear conditioning research since Watson's case study on "Little Albert" has vastly evolved and...
Stress and sensitization are central concepts in chronic pain. Both can be a consequence and a contr...