Why some surgical participants experience pain that extends beyond the original site of injury while others do not remains poorly understood. Both pain intensity and widespread pain contribute to recovery and quality of life, yet their psychosocial correlates are often examined separately. Using data from two large pre-surgical cohorts-participants preparing for knee replacement or thoracic surgery-we examined associations between sociodemographic and psychosocial factors, pain intensity at surgical and non-surgical sites, and widespread chronic pain. Across cohorts and outcomes, fatigue showed the strongest and most consistent associations with pain intensity and widespread pain, independent of other measured factors. Fatigue also occupied a central position in statistical association networks and accounted for substantial shared variance among multiple psychosocial variables, including sleep disturbance, depression, stress, and socioeconomic disadvantage. Pain at non-surgical sites was strongly associated with widespread pain and frequently accounted for observed associations between surgical-site pain and widespread pain. Together, these findings highlight robust patterns of association linking fatigue, pain intensity, and widespread pain in pre-surgical populations.
Sun et al. (Wed,) studied this question.