Davison Michael J, Ioannidis George, Maly Monica R, Adachi Jonathan D, Beattie Karen A
Department of Medical Science, McMaster University, 25 Charlton Ave. E., Suite 501, Hamilton, ON, L8N 1Y2, Canada.
Department of Medicine, McMaster University, 25 Charlton Ave. E., Suite 501, Hamilton, ON, L8N 1Y2, Canada.
Clin Rheumatol. 2016 Feb;35(2):371-9. doi: 10.1007/s10067-014-2810-0. Epub 2014 Nov 8.
Severe constant and intermittent knee pain are associated with "unacceptable" symptoms in older adults with osteoarthritis (OA) [22]. We hypothesized that constant and intermittent pain would be independently related to physical function, with intermittent knee pain being a better predictor of future declines in physical function in early symptomatic knee OA. This study included men (n = 189) and women (n = 133) with radiographic, unilateral knee OA, observed using data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI). Pain types were measured using the Intermittent and Constant Osteoarthritis Pain (ICOAP) scale. Physical function was measured using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC-PF) and Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS-FSR) and physical performance tests. High baseline intermittent (B = 0.277; p = 0.001) and constant (B = 0.252; p = 0.001) knee pain were related to poor WOMAC-PF. Increased constant (B = 0.484; p = 0.001) and intermittent (B = 0.104; p = 0.040) pain were related to 2-year decreased WOMAC-PF. High baseline intermittent knee pain predicted poor KOOS-FSR at year 2 (B = -0.357; p = 0.016). Increased constant pain was related to decreased chair stand test performance over 2 years in women (B = 0.077; p = 0.001). High baseline intermittent pain was related to poor performance on repeated chair stands (B = 0.035; p = 0.021), while baseline constant pain was related to poor 400-m walk performance in women (B = 0.636; p = 0.047). Intermittent and constant knee pain were independent factors in self-perceived physical function and were important predictors of future limitations in physical function. Identifying intermittent and constant pain in early symptomatic OA may allow patients to adopt strategies to prevent worsening pain and future declines in physical function.
在患有骨关节炎(OA)的老年人中,严重的持续性和间歇性膝关节疼痛与“不可接受”的症状相关[22]。我们假设,持续性和间歇性疼痛会独立影响身体功能,在有早期症状的膝关节OA中,间歇性膝关节疼痛能更好地预测未来身体功能的下降。本研究纳入了189名男性和133名女性,他们均患有影像学确诊的单侧膝关节OA,数据来自骨关节炎倡议组织(OAI)。疼痛类型采用间歇性和持续性骨关节炎疼痛(ICOAP)量表进行测量。身体功能通过西安大略和麦克马斯特大学骨关节炎指数(WOMAC-PF)、膝关节损伤和骨关节炎疗效评分(KOOS-FSR)以及身体性能测试进行评估。基线时较高的间歇性(B = 0.277;p = 0.001)和持续性(B = 0.252;p = 0.001)膝关节疼痛与较差的WOMAC-PF相关。持续性(B = 0.484;p = 0.001)和间歇性(B = 0.104;p = 0.040)疼痛增加与2年内WOMAC-PF下降相关。基线时较高的间歇性膝关节疼痛预测第2年KOOS-FSR较差(B = -0.357;p = 0.016)。持续性疼痛增加与女性在2年内椅子站立测试表现下降相关(B = 0.077;p = 0.001)。基线时较高的间歇性疼痛与重复椅子站立表现较差相关(B = 0.035;p = 0.021),而基线时持续性疼痛与女性400米步行表现较差相关(B = 0.636;p = 0.047)。间歇性和持续性膝关节疼痛是自我感知身体功能的独立因素,也是未来身体功能受限的重要预测因素。识别早期症状性OA中的间歇性和持续性疼痛,可能使患者采取策略预防疼痛恶化和未来身体功能下降。