The use of virtual reality for coping with pain with healthy participants
Psicothema 2012, Volumen 24, número 4
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How to Cite

Gutiérrez-Maldonado, J., Gutiérrez-Martínez, O., Loreto-Quijada, D., & Nieto-Luna, R. (2012). The use of virtual reality for coping with pain with healthy participants. Psicothema, 24(Número 4), 516–522. Retrieved from https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/PST/article/view/9697

Abstract

The present study investigates whether a virtual reality (VR) intervention can influence pain catastrophizing, pain self-efficacy and other pain-related measures reported during a cold-pressor experience. Forty-five healthy participants underwent two consecutive cold-pressor trials, one using VR and one without VR exposure, in counterbalanced order. The VR intervention encouraged participants to search actively for the correspondence between the pain experienced and a VR stereoscopic figure, which could be interactively manipulated. The VR intervention led to significant increases in pain threshold, pain tolerance and pain self-efficacy, as well as a significant reduction of in vivo pain catastrophizing. The possibilities of using VR as a tool for enhancing perceived pain control are discussed.
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