Original Research Article The Pain Provocation Technique for Adolescents with Chronic Pain: Preliminary Evidence for Its Effectiveness

2016 
Objective. This study aims to investigate the effec- tiveness of the "pain provocation technique" (PPT)—a focused treatment strategy incorporating interoceptive exposure (i.e., imagining increases in pain intensity), bilateral stimulation (tactile stimula- tion), and implementation of pain-related coping to decrease pain intensity—for adolescents suffering from chronic pain. Design. Prospective observational comparative study. Methods. Adolescents utilizing PPT (19 boys and 21 girls) within multimodal inpatient treatment were compared with adolescents in standard multimodal inpatient treatment matched for age, gender, and diagnosis. Core outcome variables (pain intensity, disability, emotional distress) were assessed at admission and 3 months posttreatment. Results. Adolescents in the PPT group de- monstrated a sharper decrease in pain intensity and school aversion. Both groups demonstrated significant reductions in disability and emotional distress. Conclusions. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of focused treatment strategies such as interoceptive exposure for adolescents suffering from disabling chronic pain. Future studies are war- ranted to carefully investigate the effectiveness and possible process of change during the PPT such as sensory, cognitive, emotional, and memory aspects.
    • Correction
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    40
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []