Fear of progression, imagery, interpretation bias, and their relationship with endometriosis pain
This study found that fear of progression, imagery, and interpretation bias were associated with increased fear of progression and greater pain interference in women with endometriosis.
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References (34)
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Cited by (10)
- The endometriosis pain course: Exploring predictors of clinical response to an internet-delivered psychological pain management program for endometriosis 2026
- Correlates of body image in individuals with endometriosis: The role of body compassion and endometriosis-related symptoms 2026
- Do Individuals With Endometriosis Display Interpretation and Memory Recall Biases Compared With Pain‐Free Controls? A Cross‐Sectional Study 2026
- Endometriosis and ovarian cancer: epidemiological evidence, molecular insights, and clinical decision-making 2026
- Exploring the Immediate Effects of an Online Self-Regulation Intervention on Pain, Affect, and Arousal in Women with Endometriosis: An Observational Study Protocol 2025
- Causal associations between sleep disorders and endometriosis: A Mendelian randomization analysis 2025
- Bringing Endometriosis to the Road of Contemporary Pain Science 2025
- Impact of Therapeutic Interventions on Fear of Progression in Patients with Endometriosis 2025
- Experience of endometriosis pain: a qualitative study 2025
- Fear of progression, depression, and sleep difficulties in people experiencing endometriosis-pain: A cross-sectional study 2024
Source provenance
- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-06-15T06:13:43.845377+00:00
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
- pubmed
- last seen: 2026-06-15T06:12:34.389221+00:00