| Literature DB >> 24244589 |
Christine Cedraschi1, Sylvie Delézay, Marc Marty, Francis Berenbaum, Didier Bouhassira, Yves Henrotin, Françoise Laroche, Serge Perrot.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Pain is the primary outcome measurement in osteoarthritis, and its assessment is mostly based on its intensity. The management of this difficult chronic condition could be improved by using pain descriptors to improve analyses of painful sensations. This should help to define subgroups of patients based on pain phenotype, for more adapted treatment. This study draws upon patients' descriptions of their pain, to identify and understand their perception of osteoarthritis pain and to categorize pain dimensions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24244589 PMCID: PMC3823799 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079988
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Interview topic guide.
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| Can you briefly introduce yourself to the group? |
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| Could you please describe all the different types of pains you experience from your osteoarthritis? |
| Are there other participants who feel the same? | |
| Would someone from the group like to add to the description that has just been made? | |
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| Is there anything else you would like to add to the list and to the discussion? |
Core painful sensations expressed by the participants.
| Name of pain | Main characteristic | Additional characteristics | Participants’ words |
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| Background pain | Always there, located everywhere in the body | May be akin to long-lasting tiredness |
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| Sort of oozing pain, with a dull pitch and a variable intensity | May start low and then become more present/ stronger, acute | ||
| “Deep pain” | Inner location: close to or within the “bone” | Precise impact point hard to identify |
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| Dull to acute | Feelings of “alien things inside” = augmented anxiety |
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| “Stabbing pain” | Short, intense, brutally penetrating pain, with a slow, gradual withdrawal of pain | May happen at night. May stop as rapidly as it started. Tearing feeling / bodily integrity. threatened. Patient may stop moving/doing what he was doing with the “shock” of the pain. Sometimes cries, shouts. “Defective limb” feeling. Mostly in hands, knees. |
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| May happen several times per day | |||
| “Tearing pain” | Close to a stabbing pain but closer to the skin / with larger impact. Intense, acute pain; Lasts longer since it awakens the “background pain” | If very intense, feeling that “the heart will stop beating”. Anxiety provoked by intensity of pain. Seizes all of the body + awareness of patient. May happen at night |
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| “Electrical shock” | Sudden, extremely acute, but less intense than the preceding pain. | No identifiable cause. Brief and goes away quickly, entirely. Global physical reaction to it. Some report a “vibrating” sensation. No regularity/pattern in occurrences. |
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| Less anxiety because no feeling of physically penetrating/tearing alien element. | |||
| “Contact pain” | The merest touch awakens a fierce pain. Very common (most patients) | Very intense pain: “ |
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| “Missing limb” | More discomfort + acute anxiety than real pain (not always a “pain”). Patient has the feeling his/her leg is suddenly missing or unable to carry him/her and is afraid of falling / really hurting himself/herself if on stairs, or outside, etc. | For some: violent pain (when caused by a movement?). Dull, pain when no particular movement involved. Deep pain. Feeling of unhinged limb. Arrested move. Loss of equilibrium. |
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| “Cramp” (feels like) or wooden leg syndrome | (limb) Stiff under the touch + feeling of inner / outer tension. | A finger or a limb. Nearly crushing sensation (but not physical). Night or day; no identifiable cause. Dull pain; very large impact zone |
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| “Pulsating knee” | Dull pain – can be acute; burning “inside”, swelling around the knee | Warm to the touch. Pulsating pain + feeling prickling. Skin “too tight”, stiff. Red skin. Long: up to one day |
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| “Brutal paralysis” | A “violent” pain, not lasting + limb/finger “blocked” + sensation of inner ravaging | May be noisy (cracking). Feeling of “inner ravaging”. Less frightening on knees. High level of anxiety when there is a feeling of ravaging/entropy inside. |
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Less common pains.
| “Crushing pain” | Physical sensation of “crushing” of a joint/limb | Mostly in hands, back. May come gradually or brutally. May be accompanied with fear for one’s body integrity. Deep pain |
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| “Twisted fingers” | Acute pain in the fingers, with a feeling / physiological consequence of them being “twisted” | May affect the thumb only. | “Twisted fingers: no more rings for me”. “My thumb: I can’t open it anymore” |
| “Prickling” | Low intensity pain, more of an intense discomfort – a prickling sensation | Rhythmic pain (slow or fast). Close to numbness. Irregular, ‘illogical” occurrences, day or night. Larger impact zones |
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| “Burning pain” | Intense, acute pain akin to burning sensation | Rare (one occurrence). Deep pain (bone) |
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| Neck pain | Described as similar to migraine. Or: stabbing in the neck. | Location: back of the head/ shoulder paralysis; Associated headache; rhythmic pain. Or: stabbing pain in the neck + ravaging feeling |
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Seven dimensions identified through qualitative analysis.
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| Pain sensation characteristics | I have burning pain. I have stabbing and crushing pain. Pain is like electric shock sensations |
| Pain variations | My pain increases at the end of the day. I have unpredictable peaks of pain |
| Pain-triggering factors | My pain is increased by wet and cold weather conditions |
| Pain and physical activity | My pain starts as activity starts |
| OA-related symptoms | My joint is stiff. My joint swells after exercise |
| Mood and image | My pain makes me feel isolated and old |
| General symptoms | My pain is exhausting me. I cannot sleep because of the pain |