PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Endurance and avoidance response patterns in pain patients: Application of action control theory in pain research.

  • Jana Buchmann,
  • Nicola Baumann,
  • Karin Meng,
  • Jana Semrau,
  • Julius Kuhl,
  • Klaus Pfeifer,
  • Miguel Kazén,
  • Heiner Vogel,
  • Hermann Faller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248875
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
p. e0248875

Abstract

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BackgroundIdentifying pain-related response patterns and understanding functional mechanisms of symptom formation and recovery are important for improving treatment.ObjectivesWe aimed to replicate pain-related avoidance-endurance response patterns associated with the Fear-Avoidance Model, and its extension, the Avoidance-Endurance Model, and examined their differences in secondary measures of stress, action control (i.e., dispositional action vs. state orientation), coping, and health.MethodsLatent profile analysis (LPA) was conducted on self-report data from 536 patients with chronic non-specific low back pain at the beginning of an inpatient rehabilitation program. Measures of stress (i.e., pain, life stress) and action control were analyzed as covariates regarding their influence on the formation of different pain response profiles. Measures of coping and health were examined as dependent variables.ResultsPartially in line with our assumptions, we found three pain response profiles of distress-avoidance, eustress-endurance, and low-endurance responses that are depending on the level of perceived stress and action control. Distress-avoidance responders emerged as the most burdened, dysfunctional patient group concerning measures of stress, action control, maladaptive coping, and health. Eustress-endurance responders showed one of the highest levels of action versus state orientation, as well as the highest levels of adaptive coping and physical activity. Low-endurance responders reported lower levels of stress as well as equal levels of action versus state orientation, maladaptive coping, and health compared to eustress-endurance responders; however, equally low levels of adaptive coping and physical activity compared to distress-avoidance responders.ConclusionsApart from the partially supported assumptions of the Fear-Avoidance and Avoidance-Endurance Model, perceived stress and dispositional action versus state orientation may play a crucial role in the formation of pain-related avoidance-endurance response patterns that vary in degree of adaptiveness. Results suggest tailoring interventions based on behavioral and functional analysis of pain responses in order to more effectively improve patients quality of life.