Abstract
Background and objective
Vulvodynia is a prevalent chronic vulval pain condition affecting 10‐28% of women, and significantly impacting their health and quality of life. It is currently poorly understood and biomedical treatments achieve only modest benefits for pain and sexual functioning. A wider psychosocial conceptualization of this condition may improve outcomes. There is currently no coherent understanding of how psychosocial factors may contribute to outcomes in Vulvodynia. The aim of this review is to identify and systematically review psychosocial factors associated with pain and sexual outcomes and to inform a psychosocial model of Vulvodynia.
Databases and data treatment
Observational/experimental studies reporting on the association between psychosocial factors and pain/sexual outcomes in adult women with Vulvodynia were eligible. Two reviewers independently conducted eligibility screening, data extraction, and quality assessment. 21 studies were included, all focused on women with Provoked Vestibulodynia (PVD). Most of the studies were low‐to‐medium quality.
Results/Conclusion
A range of general/pain‐related distress and avoidance processes, and sex/intimacy avoidance or engagement processes were significantly associated with pain, sexual functioning or sexual distress and sexual satisfaction, supporting the role of a psychosocial approach to PVD. Depression, anxiety, catastrophising, pain‐anxiety, pain acceptance, body‐exposure anxiety, attention to sexual cues, partner hostility and solicitousness, self‐efficacy, and penetration cognitions are highlighted as potentially important treatment targets in PVD. Due to the limited data available, developing a psychosocial model was not possible. Directions for future research include examining the replicability and generalisability of the factors identified, exploring differences/similarities across Vulvodynia subsets and testing tailored theoretically‐based treatments.
from Wiley: European Journal of Pain: Table of Contents https://ift.tt/3l1Iycr
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