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1.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 69(4): 587-96, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11550725

ABSTRACT

Eighty-nine women with fibromyalgia completed the Life Orientation Test, identified health and social goals, and answered questions from the Goal Systems Assessment Battery (P. Karoly & L. Ruehlman, 1995) about their valuation of, and self-efficiency in attaining, each goal. For 30 days, they responded to palm-top computer interviews about their pain and fatigue and rated their goal effort, goal progress, and pain- and fatigue-related goal barriers. Goal barriers increased and goal efforts and progress decreased on days with greater pain and fatigue; goals valued more highly were pursued more effortfully and successfully; more optimistic individuals were less likely to perceive goal barriers and, on days that were more fatiguing than usual, were less likely to reduce their effort and to retreat from progress in achieving their health goal; and more pessimistic individuals perceived greater goal barriers on days that were less painful than usual.


Subject(s)
Aspirations, Psychological , Fibromyalgia/psychology , Goals , Self Efficacy , Social Values , Achievement , Adult , Female , Humans , Internal-External Control , Middle Aged , Motivation , Personality Assessment , Sick Role
2.
Pain ; 81(1-2): 173-7, 1999 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10353505

ABSTRACT

While the majority of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients report that their pain is influenced by the weather, studies examining the impact of weather on RA pain have yielded equivocal results. It is not clear from the existing studies if the mixed results are due to limited statistical power (e.g. small sample sizes and restricted variability in weather indices) or the failure to consider individual differences. The current study addressed these weaknesses by having 75 RA patients (mean age = 52.7; 71% female) record their daily pain severity for 75 consecutive days. Objective weather indices including temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, and percentage of sunlight were obtained for the same dates from a local weather service. The results indicate that for the entire sample, pain levels were highest on cold, overcast days and following days with high barometric pressure. Pain levels also increased as a function of change in relative humidity from one day to the next. Individual difference analyses revealed significant variability between patients in their weather sensitivity patterns. In general, patients with higher levels of self-reported pain demonstrated more weather sensitivity. When considering the magnitude of these effects, however, weather variables accounted for only a small amount of change in pain scores. This pattern was true even for patients with the most pronounced pain-weather relationships. Thus, although weather sensitivity was found, the effect sizes were not clinically meaningful.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/physiopathology , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Pain/physiopathology , Weather , Adult , Atmospheric Pressure , Female , Humans , Humidity , Male , Middle Aged , Sunlight , Temperature
3.
Health Psychol ; 17(1): 40-7, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9459068

ABSTRACT

For 30 days, 50 women with primary fibromyalgia syndrome reported daily progress and effort toward a health-fitness and a social-interpersonal goal and the extent to which their pain and fatigue hindered their accomplishment. They also carried palmtop computers to assess their sleep and their pain, fatigue, and positive and negative mood throughout the day. Analyses of the person-day data set showed that on days during which pain or fatigue increased from morning to evening, participants perceived their goal progress to be more attenuated by pain and fatigue. Unrestorative sleep the night before predicted the following day's effort and progress toward accomplishing health-fitness goals, but not social-interpersonal goals. Finally, participants who reported more progress toward social-interpersonal goals on a given day were more likely to evidence improvements in positive mood across the day, regardless of any changes in pain or fatigue that day.


Subject(s)
Fibromyalgia/rehabilitation , Goals , Health Behavior , Interpersonal Relations , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Affect , Fatigue/psychology , Female , Fibromyalgia/complications , Fibromyalgia/psychology , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Pain/psychology , Sleep Wake Disorders/etiology , Sleep Wake Disorders/psychology
4.
Ann Behav Med ; 19(2): 161-70, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9603691

ABSTRACT

This study evaluated the initial promise of a dual-pathway conceptual model linking daily event stressors to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease activity through changes in immune system activation and mood. Fifty individuals, who were studied on five occasions two weeks apart, reported daily event stressors on the Daily Life Experience Checklist, daily mood on an abbreviated version of the Profile of Mood States-B, and daily joint pain on the Rapid Assessment of Disease Activity in Rheumatology. Serial clinical examinations comprised ratings of joint tenderness and swelling, and blood drawn during exams was analyzed for sedimentation rate (an indicator of systemic inflammation) and soluble interleukin-2 receptors (a marker of immune system activation known to correlate with RA disease activity). Across-person analyses failed to establish links from daily event stressors to either disease activity or composites of joint pain and joint inflammation when associations were adjusted for the effect of neuroticism on self-report measures. Pooled within-person analyses, however, were generally consistent with the relations predicted by the dual-pathway model. Increases in daily event stressors during the week preceding each clinical exam were associated with increased joint pain (regardless of changes in mood). At the same time, increased daily stressors were indirectly associated with decreased joint inflammation through reduction in levels of soluble interleukin-2 receptors. The dual-pathway model, which may be limited to short-term psychological and psychoimmunologic processes, underscores the importance of distinguishing potentially opposing effects of stress on pain versus inflammation in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Psychophysiologic Disorders/psychology , Somatoform Disorders/psychology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Adult , Aged , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/diagnosis , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/immunology , Blood Sedimentation , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Psychoneuroimmunology , Psychophysiologic Disorders/diagnosis , Psychophysiologic Disorders/immunology , Receptors, Interleukin-2/blood , Risk Factors , Somatoform Disorders/diagnosis , Somatoform Disorders/immunology
5.
Pain ; 68(2-3): 363-8, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9121825

ABSTRACT

Fifty women with fibromyalgia syndrome (FS) recorded their sleep quality, pain intensity, and attention to pain for 30 days, using palm-top computers programmed as electronic interviewers. They described their previous night's sleep quality within one-half hour of awakening each day, and at randomly selected times in the morning, afternoon, and evening rated their present pain in 14 regions and attention to pain during the last 30 min. We analyzed the 30-day aggregates cross-sectionally at the across-persons level and the pooled data set of 1500 person-days at the within-persons level after adjusting for between-persons variation and autocorrelation. Poorer sleepers tended to report significantly more pain. A night of poorer sleep was followed by a significantly more painful day, and a more painful day was followed by a night of poorer sleep. Pain attention and sleep were unrelated at the across-persons level of analysis. But there was a significant bi-directional within-person association between pain attention and sleep quality that was not explained by changes in pain intensity.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Fibromyalgia/complications , Interviews as Topic/methods , Medical Records , Pain Measurement , Sleep/physiology , Adult , Electronics, Medical , Female , Humans , Prospective Studies , Quality of Life
7.
Arthritis Rheum ; 37(10): 1513-20, 1994 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7945478

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We investigated the relationship of fibromyalgia (FM) tender points to other manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: Sixty-seven RA patients completed questionnaires at study entry and described symptoms, emotionally significant events, and mood every evening for 75 days. Joint and tender point examinations were conducted every 2 weeks. RESULTS: Controlling for joint tenderness, the tender point count correlated with the degree of daily stress. Depression was not significantly related when daily stress was controlled for. CONCLUSION: We conclude that FM tender point counts correlate uniquely with RA patients' reports of daily stress.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Fibromyalgia/psychology , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Adult , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/complications , Depression/psychology , Female , Fibromyalgia/complications , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Severity of Illness Index
8.
J Pers Soc Psychol ; 66(2): 329-40, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8195989

ABSTRACT

We examined the mood-related and pain-related consequences of daily stressors among 74 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis who supplied daily reports for 75 days. Meta-analyses of time series regression coefficients disclosed a significant same-day relation between events and mood but no consistent effects of events on same-day pain, next-day mood, or next-day pain. With distributional characteristics of the daily data controlled, Ss with more active inflammatory disease showed a greater positive relation of events with same-day and next-day pain, those with a recent history of more major life stressors showed a greater positive relation of events with next-day pain, and those with less social support showed a greater positive relation of events with next-day mood disturbance. Implications of these and other findings for theories of stress and adaptation and the methodological challenges of daily experience research are discussed.


Subject(s)
Arousal , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Depression/psychology , Individuality , Pain/psychology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Life Change Events , Male , Middle Aged , Pain Measurement , Personality Inventory , Sick Role , Social Support , Somatoform Disorders/psychology
10.
Arthritis Rheum ; 36(2): 199-203, 1993 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8431208

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine synchronous changes in soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) levels, daily indicators of emotional stress, joint inflammation, and reported pain in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: Fourteen patients were studied on each of 6 occasions, 2 weeks apart. Measures included daily ratings of mood disturbance, undesirable events, and joint pain; clinical examination of joint swelling; and serum assays of sIL-2R. Pooled within-person correlations among these variables were calculated. RESULTS: Consistent with the results of previous research, joint inflammation covaried directly with sIL-2R levels. Changes in mood disturbance were unrelated to changes in joint inflammation, but increases in mood disturbance were linked with decreases in sIL-2R levels and increases in reported joint pain. CONCLUSION: These findings provide preliminary evidence that psychoimmune processes may be implicated in short-term changes in RA disease activity.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/pathology , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Receptors, Interleukin-2/analysis , Stress, Psychological/pathology , Adult , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Solubility , Stress, Psychological/blood , Time Factors
11.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 60(1): 119-26, 1992 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1556274

ABSTRACT

For 75 consecutive days, 54 Ss with rheumatoid arthritis supplied daily reports of their mood and joint pain. After aggregating daily reports, the relation between chronic mood and chronic pain remained statistically significant when controlling for neuroticism, depression, disease activity, disability, and characteristic responses to increasing pain. Findings of a path analysis suggest that (a) individuals higher in neuroticism experience more chronic distress regardless of their responses to pain, their pain intensity, and depressive symptomatology, and (b) the relation between neuroticism and chronic pain is mediated by the propensity of high-neuroticism individuals to catastrophize their pain. Within-subject analyses that controlled for autocorrelation and linear trends in the time series revealed that 40% of the Ss experienced significantly worse moods on more painful days. Although individuals higher in neuroticism reported more intense pain and more negative mood, their daily mood was less strongly linked to their daily pain.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Depression/psychology , Neurotic Disorders/psychology , Pain Measurement , Sick Role , Adaptation, Psychological , Defense Mechanisms , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies
13.
Health Psychol ; 10(6): 419-26, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1765037

ABSTRACT

Explored the distribution and temporal patterning of daily pain reported by 47 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) for 75 consecutive days. Approximately half the pain series were significantly positively skewed, trended significantly across the recording period, or both. One fourth of the sample had relatively painful "outlier" days that clustered together. Most series displayed a significant autocorrelation in pain intensity across successive days even when the series were detrended. Patients with more active disease had pain that was more intense but more predictable from day to day and reported fewer painful outlying days and briefer episodes of atypically severe pain. Patients describing themselves as more depressed on the Center for Epidemiological Stress Depression Scale also reported more intense pain across the recording period, independent of their level of disease activity and disability. Implications for daily process studies of RA pain are discussed.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Individuality , Pain Measurement , Sick Role , Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Aged , Depression/psychology , Disability Evaluation , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies
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