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Journal Article

Citation

Guéz M, Brännström R, Nyberg L, Toolanen G, Hildingsson C. J. Clin. Exp. Neuropsychol. 2005; 27(2): 151-163.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery and Perioperative Science, Umeå University Hospital, Umeå, Sweden. Michel.Guez@orthop.umu.se

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13803390490515487

PMID

15903148

Abstract

We measured the neuropsychological functioning in 42 patients with chronic neck pain, 21 with a whiplash trauma and 21 without previous trauma. Subjectively, the whiplash group was more forgetful and had more concentration difficulties compared with the non-traumatic group. The neuropsychological tests did not reveal any differences between the two groups and a reference group of healthy individuals. Thus, chronic neck pain did not seem to interfere with neuropsychological functioning. The personality traits assessed with MMPI-2 in our 42 patients with chronic neck pain differed significantly from the normals on several scales. We also found that the whiplash group had more divergent test results than the non-traumatic group on the MMPI-2 test. Thus, it seems that the health status in those with chronic neck pain is closely linked to separate personality traits. It is concluded that the subjective complaints and poor performance in patients with chronic neck pain may be associated to somatization and inadequate coping, especially in chronic whiplash patients.


Language: en

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