Stratford Paul W, Kennedy Deborah M, Woodhouse Linda J
School of Rehabilitation Science, Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Phys Ther. 2006 Nov;86(11):1489-96. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20060002.
Pain and physical function are core outcome measures for people with osteoarthritis, and self-report questionnaires have been the preferred assessment method. There is evidence suggesting that self-reports of physical function represent what people experience when performing activities rather than their ability to perform activities. The purpose of this study was to examine the factorial validity of performance-specific assessments of pain and function.
The sample consisted of 177 participants who had osteoarthritis of the hip (n=81) or knee (n=96) and who were awaiting total joint arthroplasty.
Through a cross-sectional design, participants performed 4 performance activities (self-paced walk test, stair test, Timed "Up & Go" Test, and Six-Minute Walk Test).
were time or distance (function) and pain ratings obtained immediately after each activity. The authors conceptualized 2 correlated factors, with pain items loading uniquely on 1 factor and functional items loading on the second factor, and uncorrelated error terms. Confirmatory factor analysis was applied.
Initial analysis yielded results consistent with the conceptualized model in this study with the exception of a nonzero correlation between the stair pain and function error terms. Dropping the stair test provided results consistent with the conceptualized model.
Given the limitations of self-report alone as a method of obtaining reasonably distinct assessments of pain and function, the extent to which performance-specific assessments could accomplish this goal was examined in this study. It was found that collectively the walk test, Timed "Up & Go" Test, and Six-Minute Walk Test yielded 2 factors consistent with the health concepts of pain and function. The authors believe that the application of these tests may provide clinicians and clinical researchers with more distinct impressions of pain and function that complement information from self-report measures.
疼痛和身体功能是骨关节炎患者的核心结局指标,自我报告问卷一直是首选的评估方法。有证据表明,身体功能的自我报告反映的是人们在进行活动时的体验,而非其进行活动的能力。本研究的目的是检验疼痛和功能的特定表现评估的因子效度。
样本包括177名患有髋关节(n = 81)或膝关节(n = 96)骨关节炎且正在等待全关节置换术的参与者。
通过横断面设计,参与者进行4项表现活动(自定步速行走测试、楼梯测试、定时起立行走测试和六分钟步行测试)。
为每项活动后立即获得的时间或距离(功能)以及疼痛评分。作者将其概念化为2个相关因子,疼痛项目唯一地加载在1个因子上,功能项目加载在第二个因子上,且误差项不相关。应用验证性因子分析。
初步分析得出的结果与本研究的概念化模型一致,但楼梯疼痛和功能误差项之间存在非零相关性除外。去掉楼梯测试后得到的结果与概念化模型一致。
鉴于仅靠自我报告作为获得疼痛和功能合理不同评估方法的局限性,本研究考察了特定表现评估在多大程度上能够实现这一目标。研究发现,步行测试、定时起立行走测试和六分钟步行测试共同产生了2个与疼痛和功能的健康概念一致的因子。作者认为,应用这些测试可能会为临床医生和临床研究人员提供关于疼痛和功能的更清晰印象,以补充自我报告测量所提供的信息。