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  • Title: Daily Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms in Couples Coping With Vulvodynia: Associations With Women's Pain, Women's Sexual Function, and Both Partners' Sexual Distress.
    Author: Pâquet M, Rosen NO, Steben M, Mayrand MH, Santerre-Baillargeon M, Bergeron S.
    Journal: J Pain; 2018 May; 19(5):552-561. PubMed ID: 29309891.
    Abstract:
    UNLABELLED: Vulvodynia is a idiopathic vulvovaginal pain condition that interferes with the sexual and mental health of affected couples. Research has underscored that psychological factors, such as anxiety and depression, are associated with its development and maintenance and related sexual impairment. However, the daily role of anxiety and depressive symptoms in the pain and sexuality outcomes of couples coping with vulvodynia is not well understood. Using a dyadic daily experience method, 127 women (mean age = 26.21, SD = 6.24 years) diagnosed with vulvodynia and their partners (mean age = 27.44, SD = 7.29 years) reported on anxiety and depressive symptoms, pain, sexual function, and sexual distress over a period of 8 weeks. Multilevel modeling was used to examine how daily deviations in anxiety and depressive symptoms from a participant's own mean were associated with pain, sexual function, and sexual distress. On days of sexual activity, when women reported higher anxiety and depressive symptoms (compared with their average), they reported greater pain and lower sexual function. On days of sexual activity, when women reported higher depressive symptoms, they reported greater levels of sexual distress, and when partners reported higher anxiety and depressive symptoms, women as well as partners reported greater levels of sexual distress. Results suggest that daily anxiety and depressive symptoms play a role in women's experience of vulvodynia-related pain, women's sexual function, and the couple's sexual distress. Targeting daily anxiety and depressive symptoms could enhance the efficacy of psychological interventions for vulvodynia. PERSPECTIVE: This article examines the daily associations between anxiety and depressive symptoms, women's pain, sexual function, and sexual distress among couples coping with vulvodynia. Findings contribute to refine the biopsychosocial model of pain, showing that daily affective factors are associated with pain and sexual well-being.
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