pain adaptation
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Author(s):  
Yuna Choe ◽  
Christina Kan

Abstract While budgeting in advance is seen as a good practice to control spending, this research shows that budgeting too early for a specific purchase may increase spending. We argue that as the temporal separation between budget setting and actual purchase increases, consumers become more willing to overspend because of what we term “budget depreciation.” Consumers adapt to the reference point set by the budget such that, over time, the budgeted level becomes the status-quo spending. Thus, as more time passes, pain of payment from the budgeted amount decreases, and the willingness-to-spend increases. Across a secondary dataset of real estate purchases, one field study, and three experiments, we find evidence that consumers who set a budget in the distant (vs. near) past are more likely to overspend relative to their budget. The effect emerges for single purchase occasions rather than a category of purchases over multiple occasions. It emerges because of the hypothesized pain-of-payment process (e.g., effect is stronger among tightwads, who feel greater pain from spending; effect is mitigated under budget reassessment, which prevents pain adaptation). Our work contributes to the mental budgeting literature by invoking a role for temporal separation and draws a novel connection to prior work on payment depreciation.



2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-25
Author(s):  
Yessi Andriani ◽  
Def Primal ◽  
Mera Delima

The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of hypnobirthing pain management on the adaptability of maternal pain spontaneously. This study uses a quantitative approach to the design quasi-experimental design with treatment replications ( pretest posttest with control group.  Research results showed the existence difference in pain adaptation in mothers who are given hypnobirthing pain management intervention is 1,00 (able to adapt). No differences in pain adaptation in women who were not given pain management interventions hipnobirthing ie -0.62 (not able to adapt). Bivariate results revealed the influence of hypnobirthing pain management on the adaptation ability of maternal pain that gave birth spontaneously (p=0.002). We conclude that there is an influence of hypnobirthing pain management on pain adaptability. It is expected that medical services are able to apply hypnobirthing pain management to maternity mothers, and expected to make standardized services procedures on hypnobirthing management for pain relaxations.    Keywords : Hypnobirthing, Pain Adaptation, Pain Management



2017 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 542-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia R. Craner ◽  
Jeannie A. Sperry ◽  
Afton M. Koball ◽  
Eleshia J. Morrison ◽  
Wesley P. Gilliam
Keyword(s):  


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 15-27
Author(s):  
John A. Sturgeon ◽  
Chloe J. Taub

In recent years, there has been increasing interest in processes and characteristics that may underlie resilient adaptation to chronic pain. With this recent increase in empirical inquiry, there has emerged a degree of ambiguity in terms between pain resilience and other constructs previously connected to effective pain adaptation, such as pain acceptance, psychological flexibility, and pain self-efficacy. Objectives of the current paper included reviewing recent clinical and empirical evidence in the area of chronic pain resilience and offering a synthesis of these findings, with a specific focus on issues of defining and operationalizing this construct, compared to other constructs relevant to pain adaptation. We conclude that resilience is best defined as a dynamic process related to both stable individual characteristics and contextual and state factors, such as goal contexts and affective states. Finally, the implications of this model are discussed in the context of the extant literature on psychological interventions for chronic pain.



2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 408-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Weissman-Fogel ◽  
A. Dror ◽  
R. Defrin


2012 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Minami ◽  
R. Akhter ◽  
I. Albersen ◽  
C. Burger ◽  
T. Whittle ◽  
...  

Some management strategies for chronic orofacial pain are influenced by models ( e.g., Vicious Cycle Theory, Pain Adaptation Model) proposing either excitation or inhibition within a painful muscle. The aim of this study was to determine if experimental painful stimulation of the masseter muscle resulted in only increases or only decreases in masseter activity. Recordings of single-motor-unit (SMU, basic functional unit of muscle) activity were made from the right masseters of 10 asymptomatic participants during biting trials at the same force level and direction under infusion into the masseter of isotonic saline (no-pain condition), and in another block of biting trials on the same day, with 5% hypertonic saline (pain condition). Of the 36 SMUs studied, 2 SMUs exhibited a significant ( p < 0.05) increase, 5 a significant decrease, and 14 no significant change in firing rate during pain. Five units were present only during the no-pain block and 10 units during the pain block only. The findings suggest that, rather than only excitation or only inhibition within a painful muscle, a re-organization of activity occurs, with increases and decreases occurring within the painful muscle. This suggests the need to re-assess management strategies based on models that propose uniform effects of pain on motor activity.



2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 72-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Mohn ◽  
Olav Vassend ◽  
Stein Knardahl

AbstractBackground and purposePsychophysiological factors may contribute to the development of temporomandibular disorders (TMD). Both local orofacial and systemic responses have been investigated. However, most studies have concentrated on physiological responding during cognitive challenges, while responses during painful tasks may be highly relevant for the development of chronic pain conditions. Moreover, the relationship between experimental challenges and physiological responding may be influenced by affective responses during the experimental tasks, an issue not often considered in the literature.MethodsThis study compared electromyography (EMG) of the left masseter and left trapezius muscles, orofacial and digital skin blood-flow (SBF), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate (HR) at rest, during orofacial isometric contraction, electrocutaneous pain stimulation of the left hand, pressure pain stimulation of the masseter muscle and the sternum, and three cognitive tasks (reading aloud, a simulated job interview, and visuomotoric tracking). The participants were 25 TMD patients and 25 matched pain-free controls, all females. Affective responses were assessed with the State part of the State-Trait Personality Inventory and with Visual Analogue Scales.ResultsMasseter EMG levels were significantly lower in the TMD group relative to the control group during jaw contraction, pressure pain stimulation, the relaxation periods, and cognitive tasks. SBF, MAP, and HR responses were largely similar in the two groups, with SBF responses to pain stimulation evident at lower levels of stimulation than previously found. The TMD patients reported significantly higher levels of negative affect during the experiment.Conclusions and implicationsThe low EMG responses in the TMD group may be taken in support of the Pain Adaptation Model of musculoskeletal pain, in which reduced muscular activity serves to protect a painful area. However, it may also be supportive of the Integrated Pain Adaptation Model, where higher central nervous structures influence local muscular output. The group similarities in systemic physiological responding in combination with the elevated levels of negative state affect in the TMD patients confirm previous reports of psychosocial differences being more reliable indicators of TMD than generalized physiological responding.



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