| Literature DB >> 32258368 |
Rui Morais1, Filipe Vilas-Boas1, Pedro Pereira1, Pedro Lopes2, Carolina Simões3, Eduardo Dantas4, Inês Cunha5, Joana Roseira6, João Cortez-Pinto7, João Silva8, Jorge Lage9, Mafalda Caine10, Manuel Rocha11, Margarida Flor de Lima12, Maria Pia Costa Santos13, Mónica Garrido14, Paula Sousa15, Pedro Marcos16, Richard Azevedo17, Rui Castro18, Tiago Cúrdia Gonçalves19,20,21, Tiago Leal22, Vítor Magno-Pereira23, Rosa Ramalho1, Eduardo Rodrigues-Pinto1, Guilherme Macedo1.
Abstract
Background and study aims Previous studies have suggested a high prevalence of musculoskeletal injuries (MI) in endoscopists. Little evidence has come from European countries. Our main aim was to evaluate the prevalence, type, and impact of MI among Portuguese endoscopists. We also sought to identify risk factors for the development, severity and number of endoscopy-related MI. Material and methods A 48-question electronic survey was developed by a multidisciplinary group. The electronic survey was sent to all members of Portuguese Society of Gastroenterology (n = 705) during May 2019. Study data were collected and managed using REDCap electronic data capture tools hosted at SPG - CEREGA. Results The survey was completed by 171 endoscopists (response rate of 24.3 %), 55.0 % female with a median age of 36 years (range 26-78). The prevalence of at least one MI related to endoscopy was 69.6 % (n = 119), the most frequent being neck pain (30.4 %) and thumb pain (29.2 %). The median time for MI development was 6 years (range 2 months-30 years). Severe pain was reported by 19.3 %. Change in endoscopic technique was undertaken by 61.3 % and reduction in endoscopic caseload was undertaken by 22.7 %. Missing work was reported by 10.1 %, with the median time off from work being 30 days (range 1-90). Female gender and ≥ 15 years in practice were independently associated with MI and severe pain. Years in practice, weekly-time performing endoscopy, and gender were significant predictors of the number of MI. Conclusions Prevalence of MI was significant among Portuguese endoscopists and had a relevant impact on regular and professional activities.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32258368 PMCID: PMC7089795 DOI: 10.1055/a-1038-4343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Characteristics of endoscopists.
| Total [n (%)] n = 171 | No endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 52 | Endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 119 |
| |
|
| 0.068 | |||
Female | 94 (55.0 %) | 23 (44.2 %) | 71 (59.7 %) | |
Male | 77 (45.0 %) | 29 (55.8 %) | 48 (40.3 %) | |
|
| 36 (26–78) | 34 (26–76) | 37 (27–78) | 0.076 |
|
| 0.251 | |||
Right | 157 (91.8 %) | 45 (86.5 %) | 112 (94.1 %) | |
Left | 10 (5.9 %) | 5 (9.6 %) | 5 (4.2 %) | |
Ambidexterity | 4 (2.3 %) | 2 (3.9 %) | 2 (1.7 %) | |
|
| 0.734 | |||
Small | 54 (31.6 %) | 15 (28.9 %) | 39 (32.8 %) | |
Medium | 79 (46.2 %) | 23 (44.2 %) | 56 (47.1 %) | |
Large | 34 (19.9 %) | 13 (25.0 %) | 21 (17.6 %) | |
Extra-Large | 4 (2.3 %) | 1 (1.9 %) | 3 (2.5 %) | |
|
| 0.725 | |||
Vigorous | 5 (2.9 %) | 1 (1.9 %) | 4 (3.4 %) | |
Moderate | 37 (21.6 %) | 12 (23.1 %) | 25 (21.0 %) | |
Light | 81 (47.4 %) | 27 (51.9 %) | 54 (45.4 %) | |
Sedentary | 48 (28.1 %) | 12 (23.1 %) | 36 (30.2 %) | |
|
| 170 (150–190) | 172 (156–190) | 169 (150–186) |
|
|
| 65 (47–92) | 68.5 (50–92) | 64 (47–89) | 0.138 |
|
| 22.6 (17.6–31.6) | 22.3 (18.1–31.5) | 22.7 (17.6–31.6) | 0.817 |
|
| 0.564 | |||
Fellow | 38 (22.2 %) | 13 (25.0 %) | 25 (21.0 %) | |
Consultant | 133 (77.8 %) | 39 (75.0 %) | 94 (79.0 %) | |
|
| 0.491 | |||
AC (only) | 29 (17.0 %) | 10 (19.2 %) | 19 (16.0 %) | |
CC (only) | 32 (18.7 %) | 9 (17.3 %) | 23 (19.3 %) | |
PP (only) | 14 (8.2 %) | 5 (9.6 %) | 9 (7.6 %) | |
AC + PP | 57 (33.3 %) | 19 (36.6 %) | 38 (31.9 %) | |
CC + PP | 36 (21.0 %) | 7 (13.5 %) | 29 (24.4 %) | |
AC + CC | 1 (0.6 %) | 1 (1.9 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | |
AC + CC + PP | 2 (1.2 %) | 1 (1.9 %) | 1 (0.8 %) |
MI, musculoskeletal injuries; BMI, body mass index; AC, academic center; CC, community center; PP, private practice
Vigorous: 6–7 days/week; moderate: 3–5 days/week; light: 1–2 days/week; sedentary: little to no exercise
Includes both small and large practice settings.
Endoscopic procedure-related data.
| Total [n (%)] n = 171 | No endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 52 | Endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 119 |
| |
|
| 9 (0.5–45) | 6 (0.5–44) | 9 (0.5–45) |
|
|
| ||||
|
| – | |||
No | 0 (0.0 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | |
Yes | 171 (100 %) | 52 (100.0 %) | 119 (100 %) | |
|
| 0.347 | |||
No | 2 (1.2 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 2 (1.7 %) | |
Yes | 169 (98.8 %) | 52 (30.8 %) | 117 (98.3 %) | |
|
| 0.840 | |||
No | 134 (78.4 %) | 40 (76.9 %) | 94 (79.0 %) | |
Yes | 37 (21.6 %) | 12 (23.1 %) | 25 (21.0 %) | |
|
| 0.690 | |||
No | 134 (78.4 %) | 42 (80.8 %) | 92 (77.3 %) | |
Yes | 37 (21.6 %) | 10 (19.2 %) | 27 (22.7 %) | |
|
| 0.876 | |||
No | 157 (91.8 %) | 48 (92.3 %) | 109 (91.6 %) | |
Yes | 14 (8.2 %) | 4 (7.7 %) | 10 (8.4 %) | |
|
| 0.278 | |||
No | 154 (90.1 %) | 49 (94.2 %) | 105 (88.2 %) | |
Yes | 17 (9.9 %) | 3 (5.8 %) | 14 (11.8 %) | |
|
| ||||
|
| 0.517 | |||
No | 16 (9.4 %) | 6 (11.5 %) | 10 (8.4 %) | |
Yes | 155 (90.6 %) | 46 (88.5 %) | 109 (91.6 %) | |
|
| 0.254 | |||
No | 27 (15.8 %) | 11 (21.2 %) | 16 (13.4 %) | |
Yes | 144 (84.2 %) | 41 (78.8 %) | 103 (86.6 %) | |
|
| 0.652 | |||
No | 157 (91.8 %) | 47 (90.4 %) | 110 (92.4 %) | |
Yes | 14 (8.2 %) | 5 (9.6 %) | 9 (7.6 %) | |
|
| ||||
No | 100 (58.5 %) | 31 (59.6 %) | 69 (58.0 %) | 0.842 |
Yes | 71 (41.5 %) | 21 (40.4 %) | 50 (42.0 %) | |
|
| 0.405 | |||
No | 79 (46.2 %) | 27 (51.9 %) | 52 (43.7 %) | |
Yes | 92 (53.8 %) | 25 (48.1 %) | 67 (56.3 %) | |
|
| 0.299 | |||
No | 59 (34.5 %) | 21 (40.4 %) | 38 (31.9 %) | |
Yes | 112 (65.5 %) | 31 (59.6 %) | 81 (68.1 %) | |
MI, musculoskeletal injuries; EGD, esophagogastroduodenoscopy; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; EUS, endoscopic ultrasonography; BAE, Balloon-assisted enteroscopy; EMR, endoscopic mucosal resection; ESD, endoscopic submucosal dissection; PEG, percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
Endoscopy workload parameters.
| Total n = 171 | No endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 52 | Endoscopy-related MI [n (%)] n = 119 |
| |
|
| 50 (5–75) | 52.5 (15–75) | 50 (5–70) | 0.171 |
|
| 25 (3–52) | 25 (10–50) | 25 (3–52) | 0.361 |
|
| 50 (15–100 %) | 50 (23–100 %) | 50 (15–95 %) | 0.690 |
|
| ||||
EGD | 30 (5–100 %) | 40 (10–90 %) | 30 (5–100 %) |
|
Colonoscopy | 60 (0–90 %) | 50 (10–90 %) | 60 (0–90 %) |
|
ERCP | 0 (0–40 %) | 0 (0–40 %) | 0 (0–40 %) | 0.644 |
Diagnostic EUS | 0 (0–40 %) | 0 (0–40 %) | 0 (0–32 %) | 0.743 |
Therapeutic EUS | 0 (0–20 %) | 0 (0–8 %) | 0 (0–20 %) | 0.952 |
BAE | 0 (0–20 %) | 0 (0–5 %) | 0 (0–20 %) | 0.127 |
|
| 60 (0–100 %) | 60 (0–100 %) | 63 (0–100 %) | 0.807 |
|
| 0.256 | |||
Never | 29 (17.0 %) | 12 (23.1 %) | 17 (14.3 %) | |
Occasionally | 126 (73.7 %) | 34 (65.4 %) | 92 (77.3 %) | |
Frequently | 16 (9.4 %) | 6 (11.5 %) | 10 (8.4 %) | |
|
| ||||
Height-adjustable table | 158 (92.4 %) | 48 (92.3 %) | 110 (92.4 %) | 0.977 |
Monitor at eye level | 122 (71.3 %) | 40 (76.9 %) | 82 (68.9 %) | 0.359 |
No helping to move patients | 51 (29.8 %) | 15 (28.8 %) | 36 (30.3 %) | 0.853 |
Sitting | 12 (7.0 %) | 3 (5.8 %) | 9 (7.6 %) | 0.673 |
None | 6 (3.5 %) | 1 (1.9 %) | 5 (4.2 %) | 0.456 |
MI, musculoskeletal injuries; EGD, esophagogastroduodenoscopy; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, EUS: endoscopic ultrasonography; BAE, Balloon-assisted enteroscopy
Occasionally: 1–2 times per shift; Frequently: 3–4 times per shift
More than one may be present per endoscopist
Prevalence, characteristics, and types of endoscopy-related MI.
| Total [n (%)] n = 171 | Consultants n (%)] n = 133 | Fellows [n (%)] n = 38 |
| |
|
| 119 (69.6 %) | 94 (70.7 %) | 25 (65.8 %) | 0.555 |
|
| 2 (1–8) | 3 (1–8) | 2 (1–4) |
|
|
| 6 [0 (2 months)-30] | 9 [0 (2 months)-30] | 1 [0 (4 months)-3] |
|
|
| 5 (1–10) | 5 (1–10) | 5 (2–9) | 0.120 |
|
| ||||
|
| 50 (29.2 %) | 41 (30.8 %) | 9 (23.7 %) | 0.427 |
|
| 46 (26.9 %) | 41 (30.8 %) | 5 (13.2 %) |
|
|
| 25 (14.6 %) | 18 (13.5 %) | 7 (18.4 %) | 0.443 |
|
| 47 (27.5 %) | 41 (30.8 %) | 6 (15.8 %) | 0.098 |
|
| 16 (9.4 %) | 15 (11.3 %) | 1 (2.6 %) | 0.107 |
|
| 52 (30.4 %) | 39 (29.3 %) | 13 (34.2 %) | 0.555 |
|
| 26 (15.2 %) | 23 (17.3 %) | 3 (7.9 %) | 0.204 |
|
| 30 (17.5 %) | 27 (20.3 %) | 3 (7.9 %) | 0.092 |
|
| 21 (12.3 %) | 20 (15.0 %) | 1 (2.6 %) |
|
MI, musculoskeletal injuries; NRS, Numerical Rating Scale
More than one lesion may be present per endoscopist
MI characterization, impact, and treatment.
| Total [n (%)] n = 119 | Consultants [n (%)] n = 94 | Fellows [n (%)] n = 25 |
| |
|
| 0.286 | |||
Work, during endoscopy | 24 (20.2 %) | 16 (17.0 %) | 8 (32.0 %) | |
Work, all the time | 8 (6.7 %) | 5 (5.3 %) | 3 (12.0 %) | |
Work + daily activities | 54 (45.4 %) | 46 (49.0 %) | 8 (32.0 %) | |
Daily activities only | 3 (2.5 %) | 2 (2.1 %) | 1 (4.0 %) | |
All the time, including at rest | 27 (22.7 %) | 22 (23.4 %) | 5 (20.0 %) | |
No data | 3 (2.5 %) | 3 (3.2 %) | – | |
|
| 0.646 | |||
Yes | 73 (61.3 %) | 59 (62.8 %) | 14 (56.0 %) | |
Not possible to change technique | 17 (14.3 %) | 12 (12.8 %) | 5 (20.0 %) | |
Change of technique not tried | 27 (22.7 %) | 21 (22.3 %) | 6 (24.0 %) | |
No data | 2 (1.7 %) | 2 (2.1 %) | – | |
|
| ||||
Less endoscopy | 27 (22.7 %) | 26 (27.7 %) | 1 (4.0 %) |
|
Stretching exercises before endoscopy | 20 (16.8 %) | 16 (17.0 %) | 4 (16.0 %) | 0.903 |
More breaks between procedures | 26 (21.8 %) | 23 (24.5 %) | 3 (12.0 %) | 0.276 |
Adjustable bed | 59 (49.6 %) | 45 (47.9 %) | 14 (56.0 %) | 0.470 |
Orthopedic shoes | 18 (15.1 %) | 15 (16.0 %) | 3 (12.0 %) | 0.624 |
No modification | 32 (26.9 %) | 25 (26.6 %) | 7 (28.0 %) | 0.888 |
|
| ||||
NSAIDs | 68 (57.1 %) | 61 (64.9 %) | 7 (28.0 %) |
|
Paracetamol | 21 (17.6 %) | 17 (18.1 %) | 4 (16.0 %) | 0.808 |
Corticosteroid injection | 15 (12.6 %) | 14 (14.9 %) | 1 (4.0 %) | 0.145 |
Parenteral corticosteroid | 2 (1.7 %) | 2 (2.1 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 0.462 |
Other medications
| 12 (10.1 %) | 10 (10.6 %) | 2 (8.0 %) | 0.697 |
Physiotherapy | 36 (30.3 %) | 33 (35.1 %) | 3 (12.0 %) |
|
Splinting | 12 (10.1 %) | 12 (12.8 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 0.060 |
Surgery | 2 (1.7 %) | 2 (2.1 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 0.462 |
Rest | 35 (29.4 %) | 30 (31.9 %) | 5 (20.0 %) | 0.326 |
No treatment | 30 (25.2 %) | 16 (17.0 %) | 14 (56.0 %) |
|
|
| 12 (10.1 %) | 11 (11.7 %) | 1 (4.0 %) | 0.234 |
|
| 30 (1–90) | 30 (1–90) | – | – |
|
| 30 (1–90) | 35 (1–90) | – | – |
|
| 40 (33.6 %) | 35 (37.2 %) | 5 (20.0 % | 0.152 |
MI, musculoskeletal injuries; NRS, Numerical Rating Scale; NSAIDs, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
More than one may be present per endoscopist
Tramadol n = 2; tramadol + paracetamol n = 1; paracetamol + thiocolchicoside n = 1; paracetamol + codeine n = 1; diazepam n = 3; topical NSAIDs n = 2; cyclobenzaprine chloridrate n = 1; oral corticosteroids n = 1
Work at home, hobbies
Fig. 1 A female endoscopist with 20 years in practice reported progressive limitation of left hand metacarpophalangeal joint motion associated with pain, especially during colonoscopy performance. X-ray revealed subluxation of the metacarpophalangeal joint, with associated arthrosis. Multiple treatments were tried, including corticosteroid injections, topical and oral NSAIDs and use of splinting during procedures, without symptomatic improvement. The endoscopist underwent metacarpophalangeal joint arthrodesis, with excellent clinical and functional outcome.