Familial effects account for association between chronic pain and past month smoking.
Lydia RaderA E ReinebergB PetreT D WagerN P FriedmanPublished in: European journal of pain (London, England) (2024)
Smoking does not appear to directly cause chronic pain; rather, there may be shared biopsychosocial risk factors, including genetic influences, that explain their association. These findings can be integrated into future research to identify shared biological pathways of both chronic pain and smoking behaviours as a way to conceptualize pain chronification.