Literature DB >> 20888499

Relationships among pain disability, pain intensity, illness intrusiveness, and upper extremity disability in patients with traumatic peripheral nerve injury.

Christine B Novak1, Dimitri J Anastakis, Dorcas E Beaton, Susan E Mackinnon, Joel Katz.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: In patients with a peripheral nerve injury, a simple conceptualization assumes that pain disability is determined by pain intensity. This study evaluated the relationships among pain intensity, illness intrusiveness, and pain disability.
METHODS: After we obtained ethics board approval, we enrolled English-speaking adult patients who had experienced an upper extremity peripheral nerve injury 0.5 to 15 years previously. Patients completed the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (DASH), Illness Intrusiveness Scale, Pain Disability Index, and McGill Pain questionnaires. We used multivariate linear regression to evaluate the variables that predicted pain disability.
RESULTS: There were 124 patients (41 women, 83 men; mean ± SD, 41 ± 16 y of age). The median time since injury was 14 months (range, 6-145 months), and there were 43 brachial plexus nerve injuries. Mean ± SD scores were: pain disability, 29 ± 18; illness intrusiveness, 40 ± 18; DASH, 45 ± 22; and pain intensity, 4.6 ± 3.0. The pain disability, DASH, and illness intrusiveness scores were significantly higher in patients with brachial plexus injuries than in those with distal nerve injuries (p<.05). There was strong correlation between pain disability and DASH (r = 0.764, p<.001) and illness intrusiveness (r = 0.738, p<.001) and a weaker correlation with pain intensity (r = 0.549, p<.001). The final regression model predicting pain disability scores explained 70% of the variance with these predictors: DASH (β = 0.452, p<.001), illness intrusiveness (β = 0.372, p<.001), and pain intensity (β = 0.143, p=.018).
CONCLUSIONS: Pain disability was substantial after nerve injury, and pain intensity explained the least variance among the model variables. Pain intensity should be considered only one component of pain, and the impact of pain in the context of disability should be considered in patients with chronic nerve injury. TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic IV.
Copyright © 2010 American Society for Surgery of the Hand. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20888499     DOI: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2010.07.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hand Surg Am        ISSN: 0363-5023            Impact factor:   2.230


  14 in total

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9.  Evaluation of postoperative outcomes in patients following multi-level surgical reconstructions with the use Avive soft tissue membrane on nerve after traumatic injury of the upper extremity and lower extremity.

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10.  Incidence of Nerve Injury After Extremity Trauma in the United States.

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