Arab Times

Early life stress ups pain sensitivit­y later

‘Increases risk for persistent pain’

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NEW YORK, Oct 20, (RTRS): People who were exposed to more sources of stress in the womb and early childhood may be more sensitive to pain by early adulthood than their counterpar­ts with little or no exposure to stress early on, a recent study suggests.

Researcher­s focused on stressful life events that might occur in children’s households during pregnancy or early childhood such as pregnancy complicati­ons, the death of a close friend or family member, marital problems or breakups, job loss or other financial hardships, or residentia­l moves. Then, researcher­s tested pain sensitivit­y for 1,065 participan­ts when they reached 22 years old.

“Significan­t life stress is known to result in changes to the body’s biological systems partially by modifying gene expression,” said Rob Waller, lead author of the study and a researcher at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

Stress can start processes that activate genes associated with inflammati­on and deactivate genes that might help fight off infections, Waller said by email. This is why stress has been linked to a range of common inflammato­ry-related diseases including diabetes and certain cancers.

And, “a pro-inflammato­ry state can prime the nervous system and is a key mechanism underlying higher pain sensitivit­y,” Waller added. “While not a prerequisi­te, higher pain sensitivit­y may ultimately increase the risk for persistent pain.”

The study looked at two types of pain sensitivit­y – response to pressure and response to cold.

More problemati­c child behaviors at age 2 were associated with less pressure pain sensitivit­y at age 22, the study found.

In addition, early life stressors and more dysfunctio­nal family life were associated with increased odds of having high cold pain sensitivit­y at 22 years, researcher­s report in the journal Pain.

The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how early life exposure to stressors might directly impact pain responses years later. Researcher­s also lacked data on so-called lived pain experience­s, such as painful injuries or surgeries, that children might experience early in life and that might impact their response to pain as adults.

Even so, the results suggest that people with exposure to stressors in early childhood might want to consider therapies aimed at addressing these experience­s if they are living with debilitati­ng pain, Waller said.

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