Is your pain my pain? A study exploring the relation between pain sensitivity, pain thresholds and empathy for somatic and psychological pain

Author:

Flasbeck Vera1ORCID,Matthiessen Annegret12,Alabowitz Anne12,Rusu Adina Carmen2,Brüne Martin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Social Neuropsychiatry and Evolutionary Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Preventive Medicine LWL University Hospital Bochum, Ruhr University Bochum Bochum Germany

2. Department of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, Faculty of Medicine Ruhr University Bochum Bochum Germany

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesResearch has shown that empathy for both somatic and psychological pain recruits affective components of the so‐called pain matrix, a set of brain regions that is activated during the perception of somatic pain. In addition, the subjective evaluation of experimentally induced somatic pain is related to empathy for somatic pain. In contrast, it is unclear whether or not the subjective sensitivity to somatic pain impacts on empathy for psychological pain.MethodsIn the present study, 55 healthy participants conducted a pain‐pressure‐test (PPT) and a cold‐pressor test (CPT) in order to assess pain thresholds, pain tolerance and evaluation of pain during the task. They further conducted the social interaction empathy task (SIET), which investigates empathy for somatic as well as psychological pain. All participants completed the interpersonal‐reactivity index (IRI) and the pain‐sensitivity questionnaire (PSQ).ResultsParticipants who are in general more sensitive to somatic pain, as indicated by high‐PSQ scores, showed higher empathy, that is, higher pain ratings, for both somatic and psychological painful situations observed in others as compared to those with low‐PSQ scores. High‐PSQ scores and high pain and unpleasantness ratings during the CPT were correlated with empathy for pain (both pain conditions), whereas pain thresholds (PPT) and pain tolerance thresholds (CPT) did not correlate with empathy. The IRI subscore ‘personal distress’ correlated with psychological pain ratings.ConclusionsThus, empathy for both somatic and psychological pain were related to the subjective evaluation of somatic pain and general pain sensitivity.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Psychology,General Medicine

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