The Effect of Pressure Pain Sensitivity and Patient Factors on Self-Reported Pain-Disability in Patients with Chronic Neck Pain

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: The Effect of Pressure Pain Sensitivity and Patient Factors on Self-Reported Pain-Disability in Patients with Chronic Neck Pain
المؤلفون: Linda J. Woodhouse, Zakir Uddin, Anita Gross, John J. Triano, Joy C. MacDermid, Victoria Galea
المصدر: The Open Orthopaedics Journal
بيانات النشر: Bentham Science Publishers Ltd., 2014.
سنة النشر: 2014
مصطلحات موضوعية: neck disability, medicine.medical_specialty, Neck pain, Pressure pain, business.industry, Cross-sectional study, Pain tolerance, education, Comorbidity, medicine.disease, Article, neck pain sensitivity, Threshold of pain, gender, medicine, Physical therapy, pain tolerance, In patient, pain threshold, medicine.symptom, 10. No inequality, business, health care economics and organizations, Patient factors
الوصف: The study was conducted to estimate the extent to which pressure pain sensitivity (PPS) and patient factors predict pain-related disability in patients with neck pain (NP), and to determine if PPS differs by gender. Forty-four participants with a moderate level of chronic NP were recruited for this cross sectional study. All participants were asked to complete self-reported assessments of pain, disability and comorbidity and then underwent PPS testing at 4-selected body locations. Pearson`s r w was computed to explore relationships between the PPS measures and the self-reported assessments. Regression models were built to identify predictors of pain and disability. An independent sample t-test was done to identify gender-related differences in PPS, pain-disability and comorbidity. In this study, greater PPS (threshold and tolerance) was significantly correlated to lower pain-disability (r = -.30 to -.53, p≤0.05). Age was not correlated with pain or disability but comorbidity was (r= 0.42-.43, p≤0.01). PPS at the 4-selected body locations was able to explain neck disability (R2=25-28%). Comorbidity was the strongest predictor of neck disability (R2=30%) and pain (R2=25%). Significant mean differences for gender were found in PPS, disability and comorbidity, but not in pain intensity or rating. This study suggests that PPS may play a role in outcome measures of pain and disability but between-subject comparisons should consider gender and comorbidity issues.
تدمد: 1874-3250
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::48687601192faefe882bf0a435a05b5b
https://doi.org/10.2174/1874325001408010302
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....48687601192faefe882bf0a435a05b5b
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE