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Does attachment anxiety increase vulnerability to headache?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Does attachment anxiety increase vulnerability to headache?

J. Berry and P.D. Drummond
Journal of Psychosomatic Research, Vol.76(2), pp.113-120
2014
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Abstract

Background: Attachment-related anxiety and avoidance are potentially important aspects of pain experience and management, but have not been investigated in episodic headache sufferers or in relation to experimentally evoked headache. Objective: To determine whether adult insecure attachment styles were associated with sensitivity to pain or headache before, during or after stressful mental arithmetic in an episodic migraine or tension-type headache (T-TH) sample. Methods: Thirty-eight participants with episodic migraine, 28with episodic T-TH and 20 headache-free participants intermittently received a mild electric shock to the forehead before, during and after stressful mental arithmetic. Results: A preoccupied attachment style and attachment anxiety, but not attachment avoidance, were associated with forehead pain and the intensity of headache before and after, but not during stressful mental arithmetic. These relationships were independent of Five Factor Model personality traits. Neither attachment anxiety nor avoidance was associated with episodic migraine or T-TH. Conclusions: Anxiously attached individuals may express greater pain or show a stronger attentional bias toward painful sensations than securely attached individuals. However, distraction during psychological stress may override this attentional bias.

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Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.247 Migraines & Headaches
1.247.461 Migraine Mechanisms
Web Of Science research areas
Psychiatry
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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