Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population

Physical activity (PA) might influence the risk or progression of chronic pain through pain tolerance. Hence, we aimed to assess whether habitual leisure-time PA level and PA change affects pain tolerance longitudinally in the population. Our sample (n = 10,732; 51% women) was gathered from the sixt...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Årnes, Anders, Nielsen, Christopher Sivert, Stubhaug, Audun, Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby, Johansen, Aslak, Morseth, Bente, Strand, Bjørn Heine, Wilsgaard, Tom, Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PLOS 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/102672
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285041
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spelling ftoslouniv:oai:www.duo.uio.no:10852/102672 2023-07-30T04:07:19+02:00 Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population ENEngelskEnglishLongitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population Årnes, Anders Nielsen, Christopher Sivert Stubhaug, Audun Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby Johansen, Aslak Morseth, Bente Strand, Bjørn Heine Wilsgaard, Tom Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna 2023-05-30T13:53:15Z http://hdl.handle.net/10852/102672 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285041 EN eng PLOS Årnes, Anders Nielsen, Christopher Sivert Stubhaug, Audun Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby Johansen, Aslak Morseth, Bente Strand, Bjørn Heine Wilsgaard, Tom Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna . Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population. PLOS ONE. 2023, 18(5) http://hdl.handle.net/10852/102672 2150218 info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.jtitle=PLOS ONE&rft.volume=18&rft.spage=&rft.date=2023 PLOS ONE 18 5 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285041 Attribution 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 1932-6203 Journal article Tidsskriftartikkel Peer reviewed PublishedVersion 2023 ftoslouniv https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285041 2023-07-12T22:38:52Z Physical activity (PA) might influence the risk or progression of chronic pain through pain tolerance. Hence, we aimed to assess whether habitual leisure-time PA level and PA change affects pain tolerance longitudinally in the population. Our sample (n = 10,732; 51% women) was gathered from the sixth (Tromsø6, 2007–08) and seventh (Tromsø7, 2015–16) waves of the prospective population-based Tromsø Study, Norway. Level of leisure-time PA (sedentary, light, moderate, or vigorous) was derived from questionnaires; experimental pain tolerance was measured by the cold-pressor test (CPT). We used ordinary, and multiple-adjusted mixed, Tobit regression to assess 1) the effect of longitudinal PA change on CPT tolerance at follow-up, and 2) whether a change in pain tolerance over time varied with level of LTPA. We found that participants with high consistent PA levels over the two surveys (Tromsø6 and Tromsø7) had significantly higher tolerance than those staying sedentary (20.4 s. (95% CI: 13.7, 27.1)). Repeated measurements show that light (6.7 s. (CI 3.4, 10.0)), moderate (CI 14.1 s. (9.9, 18.3)), and vigorous (16.3 s. (CI 6.0, 26.5)) PA groups had higher pain tolerance than sedentary, with non-significant interaction showed slightly falling effects of PA over time. In conclusion, being physically active at either of two time points measured 7–8 years apart was associated with higher pain tolerance compared to being sedentary at both time-points. Pain tolerance increased with higher total activity levels, and more for those who increased their activity level during follow-up. This indicates that not only total PA amount matters but also the direction of change. PA did not significantly moderate pain tolerance change over time, though estimates suggested a slightly falling effect possibly due to ageing. These results support increased PA levels as a possible non-pharmacological pathway towards reducing or preventing chronic pain. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tromsø Universitet i Oslo: Digitale utgivelser ved UiO (DUO) Norway Tromsø PLOS ONE 18 5 e0285041
institution Open Polar
collection Universitet i Oslo: Digitale utgivelser ved UiO (DUO)
op_collection_id ftoslouniv
language English
description Physical activity (PA) might influence the risk or progression of chronic pain through pain tolerance. Hence, we aimed to assess whether habitual leisure-time PA level and PA change affects pain tolerance longitudinally in the population. Our sample (n = 10,732; 51% women) was gathered from the sixth (Tromsø6, 2007–08) and seventh (Tromsø7, 2015–16) waves of the prospective population-based Tromsø Study, Norway. Level of leisure-time PA (sedentary, light, moderate, or vigorous) was derived from questionnaires; experimental pain tolerance was measured by the cold-pressor test (CPT). We used ordinary, and multiple-adjusted mixed, Tobit regression to assess 1) the effect of longitudinal PA change on CPT tolerance at follow-up, and 2) whether a change in pain tolerance over time varied with level of LTPA. We found that participants with high consistent PA levels over the two surveys (Tromsø6 and Tromsø7) had significantly higher tolerance than those staying sedentary (20.4 s. (95% CI: 13.7, 27.1)). Repeated measurements show that light (6.7 s. (CI 3.4, 10.0)), moderate (CI 14.1 s. (9.9, 18.3)), and vigorous (16.3 s. (CI 6.0, 26.5)) PA groups had higher pain tolerance than sedentary, with non-significant interaction showed slightly falling effects of PA over time. In conclusion, being physically active at either of two time points measured 7–8 years apart was associated with higher pain tolerance compared to being sedentary at both time-points. Pain tolerance increased with higher total activity levels, and more for those who increased their activity level during follow-up. This indicates that not only total PA amount matters but also the direction of change. PA did not significantly moderate pain tolerance change over time, though estimates suggested a slightly falling effect possibly due to ageing. These results support increased PA levels as a possible non-pharmacological pathway towards reducing or preventing chronic pain.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Årnes, Anders
Nielsen, Christopher Sivert
Stubhaug, Audun
Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby
Johansen, Aslak
Morseth, Bente
Strand, Bjørn Heine
Wilsgaard, Tom
Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna
spellingShingle Årnes, Anders
Nielsen, Christopher Sivert
Stubhaug, Audun
Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby
Johansen, Aslak
Morseth, Bente
Strand, Bjørn Heine
Wilsgaard, Tom
Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna
Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
author_facet Årnes, Anders
Nielsen, Christopher Sivert
Stubhaug, Audun
Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby
Johansen, Aslak
Morseth, Bente
Strand, Bjørn Heine
Wilsgaard, Tom
Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna
author_sort Årnes, Anders
title Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
title_short Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
title_full Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
title_fullStr Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
title_full_unstemmed Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
title_sort longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population
publisher PLOS
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10852/102672
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285041
geographic Norway
Tromsø
geographic_facet Norway
Tromsø
genre Tromsø
genre_facet Tromsø
op_source 1932-6203
op_relation Årnes, Anders Nielsen, Christopher Sivert Stubhaug, Audun Fjeld, Mats Kirkeby Johansen, Aslak Morseth, Bente Strand, Bjørn Heine Wilsgaard, Tom Steingrímsdóttir, Ólöf Anna . Longitudinal relationships between habitual physical activity and pain tolerance in the general population. PLOS ONE. 2023, 18(5)
http://hdl.handle.net/10852/102672
2150218
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PLOS ONE
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