Interrelations between pain, stress and executive functioning

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Authors

Feller, Liviu
Feller, Gal
Ballyram, Theona
Chandran, Rakesh
Lemmer, Johan
Khammissa, Razia Abdool Gafaar

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage

Abstract

AIM: The purpose of this narrative review is to discuss the interrelations between pain, stress and executive functions. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE : Self-regulation, through executive functioning, exerts control over cognition, emotion and behaviour. The reciprocal neural functional connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the limbic system allows for the integration of cognitive and emotional neural pathways and then for higher-order psychological processes (reasoning, judgement etc.) to generate goal-directed adaptive behaviours and to regulate responses to psychosocial stressors and pain signals. Impairment in cognitive executive functioning may result in poor regulation of stress-, pain- and emotion-related processing of information. Conversely, adverse emotion, pain and stress impair executive functioning. The characteristic of the feedback and feedforward neural connections (quantity and quality) between the prefrontal cortex and the limbic system determine adaptive behaviour, stress response and pain experience.

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Keywords

Chronic pain, Psychosocial stressors, Executive functioning, Neural connections, Stress response, Pain experience

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Feller, L. et al. (2020) ‘Interrelations between pain, stress and executive functioning’, British Journal of Pain, 14(3), pp. 188–194. doi: 10.1177/2049463719889380.