The Role of Mindfulness Therapy in the Treatment of Chronic Pain.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore the relationship between mindfulness therapy and chronic pain, focusing on cognitive factors and psychosocial components.
Results Summary
Mindfulness therapy shows potential to improve pain-related functions and normalize psychological and neural processes, though some studies question its effectiveness. Further research is needed to fully understand its effects.
Population
Patients with chronic pain.
Effective Dosage
Not available
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mindfulness therapy | increase | pain-related functions | - | - | has been shown to improve | #1 |
psychotherapy | neutral | chronic pain | - | - | growing support for the use | #2 |
Mindfulness therapy | increase | - | - | - | positive effect | #3 |
Mindfulness therapy | neutral | cognitive factors related to chronic pain | - | - | involves | #4 |
Mindfulness therapy | neutral | psychology and nerves | - | - | has the potential to normalize | #5 |
Mindfulness therapy | increase | internal and external connectivity to work networks related to stress perception, cognition, and emotion | - | - | increase | #6 |
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Mindfulness therapy is a widely used treatment for many diseases and has been shown to improve pain-related functions. There is growing support for the use of psychotherapy in the treatment of chronic pain. While studies have shown a positive effect of mindfulness therapy, it is important to consider psychosocial factors as there are still a small number of studies that question its effectiveness. RECENT FINDINGS: Based on current studies, mindfulness therapy involves cognitive factors related to chronic pain, both in terms of cognitive production and its impact on cognitive control. Psychological and neurobasic studies were reviewed to provide a deeper understanding of these components, which include thought inhibition, attention deficit, pain catastrophizing, and self-efficacy. Mindfulness therapy has the potential to normalize psychology and nerves, and increase internal and external connectivity to work networks related to stress perception, cognition, and emotion. However, further research is needed to fully understand its effects. By exploring the relationship between mindfulness therapy and chronic pain. This review provides a new avenue for future research in psychotherapy for patients with chronic pain.