| Literature DB >> 30410031 |
Shellie A Boudreau1, Albert Cid Royo2, Mark Matthews3,4, Thomas Graven-Nielsen2, Ernest N Kamavuako5, Greg Slabaugh6, Kristian Thorborg7, Bill Vicenzino3, Michael Skovdal Rathleff8,9.
Abstract
The patient's expression of pain using digital-body maps expands analytic opportunities for exploring the spatial variation of bodily pain. A common knee pain condition in adolescents and adults is patellofemoral pain (PFP) and recently PFP was shown to be characterized by a heterogeneous distribution of pain. Whether there are important patterns in these distributions remains unclear. This pioneering study assesses the spatial variation of pain using principal component analysis and a clustering approach. Detailed digital-body maps of knee pain were drawn by 299 PFP patients of mixed sex, age, and pain severity. Three pain distribution patterns emerged resembling an Anchor, Hook, and an Ovate shape on and around the patella. The variations in pain distribution were independent of sex, age, and pain intensity. Bilateral pain associated with a longer duration of pain and the majority characterized by the Hook and Ovate pain distributions. Bilateral and/or symmetrical pain between the left and right knees may represent symptoms associated with longstanding PFP. The distinct patterns of pain location and area suggest specific underlying structures cannot be ruled out as important drivers, although central neuronal mechanisms possibly exemplified by the symmetrical representation of pain may play a role in individuals with longstanding symptoms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30410031 PMCID: PMC6224396 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-34950-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The lower-body template showing the direction of pain area variance (solid arrows) in the proximal and medial to lateral variance directions and a representation of the maximum pain distance (dashed arrow) relative to the tuberositas tibiae (a) Eigenvectors of the principle components (PC) showing the two most prevalent PCs (PC1 and PC2). Note the difference in scale and that PC1 is only positive and PC2 is positive and negative indicating spatially anisotropic pain.
Figure 2The feature space showing the relationship between principal components 1 and 2 (PC1 and PC2, respectively) and each of the three identified clusters by K-means. Each data point represents a pain drawing.
A summary of patient demographics and patient reported outcomes across the cohort and for the Anchor, Hook and Ovate pain distribution patterns.
| Female | Bilateral | Age (yrs.) | Pain Duration (Months) | Worse Pain* | Pain Area (Pixels) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall (299) | 173 | 204 | 20.8 ± 8.3 | 24.0 (12.0–48.0) | 5.0 (3.3–7.0) | 3685 (1834–6293) |
| Anchor (178) | 103 | 100 | 20.4 ± 8.5 | 19.0 (10.0–48.0) | 6.0 (3.5–7.0) | 2128 (1142–3594) |
| Hook (64) | 36 | 56 | 21.7 ± 8.1 | 25.0 (10.5–60.0) | 5.0 (4.0–7.0) | 6038 (4123–8547) |
| Ovate (57) | 23 | 48 | 21.1 ± 8.1 | 36.0 (12.0–57.0) | 5.0 (3.0–7.0) | 7634 (4914–11274) |
Data are expressed as means and standard deviations (SD) and medians with the 25th–75th interquartile range (IQR25, IQR75). *Worse Pain over the last 24 hours are based on 285 samples, with Anchor = 167, Hook = 63 and Ovate = 55.
Figure 3The spatial distributions and superimposed overlays of (a) the original pain drawings with common color scales for comparison and (b) the reconstructed pain maps based on the top two principal components with color scales for highlighting the common regions. In (c) the data-driven boundary plots fare are illustrated rom the reconstructed pain maps outlining the locations in the in which 50% and 75% of all individuals within the Anchor, Hook and Ovate pain distributions have in common.
A summary of the proportion of individuals with PFP restricted to the peripatellar, central patellar, and a mix of both peripatellar and central patellar structures within and between the Anchor, Hook and Ovate clusters.
| Within Cluster | Peripatellar | Central patellar | Mix (Peri- and Central) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | High (52.8%) | Low (8.4%) | High (38.8%) | 100% |
| Anchor | High (59.6%) | Expected (7.9%) | Low (32.6%) | 100% |
| Hook | High (79.7%) | Low (0.0%) | Low (20.3%) | 100% |
| Ovate | Low (1.8%) | Low (19.3%) | High (78.9%) | 100% |
|
|
|
|
| |
| Peripatellar | High (67.2%) | High (32.3%) | Low (0.63%) | 100% |
| Central patellar | Expected (56.0%) | Low (0.0%) | High (44.0%) | 100% |
| Peripatellar and central patellar | Expected (50.0%) | Low (11.21%) | High (38.79%) | 100% |
High and low indicates significantly greater or lower than the expected proportion, respectively, as assessed with a post hoc analysis involving pairwise comparisons using multiple z-tests with a Bonferroni correction. Statistical significance was accepted at p < 0.005.
Figure 4The overall pain area (left and right knee) and the duration of pain symptoms showing no significant relationship with each of the Anchor, Hook and Ovate pain distribution patterns.
Figure 5The variance in pain distribution as viewed from (a) medial to lateral and (b) distal to proximal within the Anchor, Hook and Ovate pain distribution pattern. * indicates a significant difference (p < 0.001) between clusters or left or right knee across clusters.
Figure 6Examples of bilateral PFP drawings showing (a) symmetrical (b) borderline symmetrical (c) and non-symmetric patterns of pain location between the left and right knee.