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Original Research

Open Access

Satisfaction with Life in Orofacial Pain Disorders: Associations and Theoretical Implications

  • Ian A. Boggero1,*,
  • Marcia V. Rojas-Ramirez2
  • Reny de Leeuw2
  • Charles R. Carlson1

1Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA

2Orofacial Pain Clinic, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA

DOI: 10.11607/ofph.1526 Vol.30,Issue 2,June 2016 pp.99-106

Published: 30 June 2016

*Corresponding Author(s): Ian A. Boggero E-mail: ian.boggero@uky.edu

Abstract

Aims: To test if patients with masticatory myofascial pain, local myalgia, centrally mediated myalgia, disc displacement, capsulitis/synovitis, or continuous neuropathic pain differed in self-reported satisfaction with life. The study also tested if satisfaction with life was similarly predicted by measures of physical, emotional, and social functioning across disorders. Methods: Satisfaction with life, fatigue, affective distress, social support, and pain data were extracted from the medical records of 343 patients seeking treatment for chronic orofacial pain. Patients were grouped by primary diagnosis assigned following their initial appointment. Satisfaction with life was compared between disorders, with and without pain intensity entered as a covariate. Disorder-specific linear regression models using physical, emotional, and social predictors of satisfaction with life were computed. Results: Patients with centrally mediated myalgia reported significantly lower satisfaction with life than did patients with any of the other five disorders. Inclusion of pain intensity as a covariate weakened but did not eliminate the effect. Satisfaction with life was predicted by measures of physical, emotional, and social functioning, but these associations were not consistent across disorders. Conclusions: Results suggest that reduced satisfaction with life in patients with centrally mediated myalgia is not due only to pain intensity. There may be other factors that predispose people to both reduced satisfaction with life and centrally mediated myalgia. Furthermore, the results suggest that satisfaction with life is differentially influenced by physical, emotional, and social functioning in different orofacial pain disorders.

Keywords

affective distress; fatigue; orofacial pain; pain intensity; satisfaction with life

Cite and Share

Ian A. Boggero,Marcia V. Rojas-Ramirez,Reny de Leeuw,Charles R. Carlson. Satisfaction with Life in Orofacial Pain Disorders: Associations and Theoretical Implications. Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 2016. 30(2);99-106.

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