Psychologic Impacts on Diabetic Neuropathic Pain.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to analyze psychological factors influencing diabetic neuropathy (DN) pain and evaluate the impact of mindfulness-based stress reduction on DN pain severity.
Results Summary
A retrospective study found a correlation between mindfulness-based stress reduction and improvement in DN pain severity. The review also highlighted the beneficial impact of psychotherapeutic modalities, including mindfulness, on DN pain.
Population
Patients with painful diabetic neuropathy (DN).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mindfulness-based stress reduction | decrease | DN pain severity | patients | - | demonstrated a correlation between patients' mindfulness-based stress reduction and improvement | #1 |
cognitive-behavioral therapy | decrease | DN patients' pain severity and pain interference | DN patients | - | supported as a superior intervention to conventional medical treatments in reducing | #2 |
cognitive-behavioral therapy | no change | depressive symptoms | DN patients | - | even when not accompanied by significant improvement | #3 |
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Many Americans cope with painful diabetic neuropathy (DN) as a sequela of high rates of diabetes mellitus in the US population. Appropriate management of this complex, debilitating chronic pain condition requires thorough evaluation through a biopsychosocial framework. This review aims to synthesize findings from original research studies and analyze the psychological factors that influence the experience of, and treatments for, DN pain. RECENT FINDINGS: Existing clinical literature suggests a wide breadth of psychological factors impacting DN pain. One research study detailed the demographic characteristics of DN patients most likely to have significant anxiety or depressive symptoms, and have emotional distress adversely impacting their response to therapies. A retrospective study demonstrated a correlation between patients' mindfulness-based stress reduction and improvement in DN pain severity. In addtion, a small-scale, randomized controlled pilot study supported cognitive-behavioral therapy as a superior intervention to conventional medical treatments in reducing DN patients' pain severity and pain interference, even when not accompanied by significant improvement in depressive symptoms. This review of investigations into psychological factors implicated in DN pain suggests that diagnosable mental health conditions as well as discrete, adverse thinking processes both exert significant influences on DN pain. This review further brings attention to the beneficial impact that psychotherapeutic modalities can have on DN pain.