STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort study. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether pressure pain threshold (PPT), tested at 2 standardized sites, could provide additional prognostic ability to predict short-term outcomes in people with acute whiplash, after controlling for age, sex, and baseline pain intensity. BACKGROUND: PPT may be a valuable assessment and prognostic indicator for people with whiplash-associated disorder. The extent to which PPT can predict short-term disability scores has yet to be explored in people with acute (of less than 30 days in duration) whiplash-associated disorder in a clinical setting. METHODS: Eligible patients were recruited from community-based physiotherapy clinics in Canada. Baseline measurements included PPT, as well as pain intensity, age, and sex. Neck-related disability was collected with the Neck Disability Index 1 to 3 months after PPT testing. Multiple linear regression models were constructed to evaluate the unique contribution of PPT in the prediction of follow-up disability scores. RESULTS: A total of 45 subjects provided complete data. A regression model that included sex, baseline pain intensity, and PPT at the distal tibialis anterior site was the most parsimonious model for predicting short-term Neck Disability Index scores 1 to 3 months after PPT testing, explaining 38.6% of the variance in outcome. None of the other variables significantly improved the predictive power of the model. CONCLUSION: Sex, pain intensity, and PPT measured at a site distal to the injury were the most parsimonious set of predictors of short-term neck-related disability score, and represented promising additions to assessment of traumatic neck pain. Neither age nor PPT at the local site was able to explain significant variance beyond those 3 predictors. Limitations to interpretation are addressed.
STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort study. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether pressure pain threshold (PPT), tested at 2 standardized sites, could provide additional prognostic ability to predict short-term outcomes in people with acute whiplash, after controlling for age, sex, and baseline pain intensity. BACKGROUND:PPT may be a valuable assessment and prognostic indicator for people with whiplash-associated disorder. The extent to which PPT can predict short-term disability scores has yet to be explored in people with acute (of less than 30 days in duration) whiplash-associated disorder in a clinical setting. METHODS: Eligible patients were recruited from community-based physiotherapy clinics in Canada. Baseline measurements included PPT, as well as pain intensity, age, and sex. Neck-related disability was collected with the Neck Disability Index 1 to 3 months after PPT testing. Multiple linear regression models were constructed to evaluate the unique contribution of PPT in the prediction of follow-up disability scores. RESULTS: A total of 45 subjects provided complete data. A regression model that included sex, baseline pain intensity, and PPT at the distal tibialis anterior site was the most parsimonious model for predicting short-term Neck Disability Index scores 1 to 3 months after PPT testing, explaining 38.6% of the variance in outcome. None of the other variables significantly improved the predictive power of the model. CONCLUSION: Sex, pain intensity, and PPT measured at a site distal to the injury were the most parsimonious set of predictors of short-term neck-related disability score, and represented promising additions to assessment of traumatic neck pain. Neither age nor PPT at the local site was able to explain significant variance beyond those 3 predictors. Limitations to interpretation are addressed.
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Authors: Steven E Harte; Andrew Schrepf; Robert Gallop; Grant H Kruger; Hing Hung Henry Lai; Siobhan Sutcliffe; Megan Halvorson; Eric Ichesco; Bruce D Naliboff; Niloofar Afari; Richard E Harris; John T Farrar; Frank Tu; John Richard Landis; Daniel J Clauw Journal: Pain Date: 2019-06 Impact factor: 7.926
Authors: David M Walton; James M Elliott; Joshua Lee; Eldon Loh; Joy C MacDermid; Siobhan Schabrun; Walter L Siqueira; Brian D Corneil; Bill Aal; Trevor Birmingham; Amy Brown; Lynn K Cooper; James P Dickey; S Jeffrey Dixon; Douglas D Fraser; Joseph S Gati; Gregory B Gloor; Gordon Good; David Holdsworth; Samuel A McLean; Wanda Millard; Jordan Miller; Jackie Sadi; David A Seminowicz; J Kevin Shoemaker; Gunter P Siegmund; Theodore Vertseegh; Timothy H Wideman Journal: Pain Res Manag Date: 2016-06-14 Impact factor: 3.037