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Original Articles

Factors Predicting Hypnotic Analgesia in Clinical Burn Pain

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Pages 377-395 | Received 05 Apr 1996, Accepted 14 Dec 1995, Published online: 31 Jan 2008
 

Abstract

The use of hypnosis for treating pain from severe burn injuries has received strong anecdotal support from case reports. Controlled studies provide less dramatic but empirically sound support for the use of hypnosis with this problem. The mechanisms behind hypnotic analgesia for bum pain are poorly understood with this patient population, as they are with pain in general. It is likely that, whatever the mechanisms are behind hypnotic pain analgesia, patients with burn injuries are more receptive to hypnosis than the general population. This article postulates some variables that may account for this enhanced receptivity including motivation, hypnotizability, dissociation, and regression.

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