Cognitive Therapyand Research, Vot 16, No. 2, 1992,pp. 99-122
Cognitive Factors and Persistent Pain: A Glimpse
into Pandora's Box I
Dennis C. Turk 2 and Thomas E. Rudy
Conventional models of persistent pain have tended to be dichotomous in nature,
with pain viewed as either physically or psychological~ based. Inadequacies
inherent in both of these views have resulted in alterative conceptualizations that
focus on the integration of biomedical with cognitive, affective, and behavioral
factors. During the past decade there has been a proliferation of research designed
to examine the relative contributions of individuals' attitudes, beliefs, appraisals,
self-perceptions, and coping strategies to the perception, experience, and response
to noxious sensations as well as treatment, and how these are modified as a result
of treatment. In this paper a cognitive-behavioral conceptualization of persistent
pain is described and contrasted with sensory, psychogenic, motivationa~ and
operant conditioning models. A number of cognitive assessment procedures and
recent research on the role of cognitive schemata, cognitive processes, and ongoing
cognition in chronic pain are briefly summarized. The central importance of
negative cognition- "catastrophizing"--is emphasized. Once pandora's
cognitive box has been opened, a range of important issues must be addressed or
one may be consumed by unbridled enthusiasm for the development of instruments
and correlational research. Several caveats regarding current research on cognitive
mediators are raised, name~, confounds among the cognitive measures that have
proliferated and between cognitive measures and measures of mood states,
generalizability of results based on pain clinic samples, and adherence to "patient
uniformity myths."
KEY WORDS: cognitive schema; cognitive processes; catastrophizing; self-efficacy; coping;
tailoring treatment.
~Preparation of this paper was supported in part by grant 2R01AR38698 from the National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, and grant 2R01DE07514 from
the National Institute of Dental Research.
2Address all correspondence to Dennis C. Turk, Ph.D., Pain Evaluation and Treatment
Institute, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Baum Boulevard at Craig Street,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.
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0147-5916/92/0400-0099506.50/0 © 1992 Plenum Publishing Corporation