Simon Corey B, Valencia Carolina, Coronado Rogelio A, Wu Samuel S, Li Zhigang, Dai Yunfeng, Farmer Kevin W, Moser Michael M, Wright Thomas W, Fillingim Roger B, George Steven Z
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, Texas.
J Pain. 2020 Jul-Aug;21(7-8):808-819. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2019.11.008. Epub 2019 Dec 28.
Shoulder surgery is a primary intervention for shoulder pain, yet many individuals experience persistent postoperative pain. Previously, we found individuals categorized as having a high-risk phenotype (comprised of COMT variation and pain catastrophizing) had approximately double the chance of not reaching a 12-month pain recovery criterion. As a means to better understand the development of persistent postoperative shoulder pain, this study advanced our previous work by examining temporal ordering of postoperative shoulder recovery based on potential mediating factors, and expansion of outcomes to include movement-evoked pain and shoulder active range of motion. Before surgery, individuals were categorized as either high-risk (high pain catastrophizing, COMT-genotype linked to low enzyme activity [n = 41]) or low-risk (low pain catastrophizing, COMT-genotype linked to normal enzyme activity [n = 107]). We then compared potential mediating variables at 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively 1) endogenous pain modulation defined by a conditioned pain modulation paradigm; and 2) and emotion factors such as anxiety, fear of movement, and depressive symptoms. At 3 months, the high-risk subgroup had higher fear and movement-evoked pain, and causal mediation analysis confirmed the direct effect of risk subgroup on 12-month movement evoked pain. However, baseline to 12-month change in depressive symptoms were found to mediate 53% of the total effect of risk subgroup on 12-month movement-evoked pain. This study introduces potential temporal components and relationships to the development of persistent postoperative shoulder pain, which future studies will confirm and assess for potential therapeutic targets. PERSPECTIVE: This study expands upon postoperative shoulder recovery measures to include movement-evoked pain and depressive symptoms, and provides preliminary indication of temporal ordering to postoperative shoulder recovery for a preidentified high-risk subgroup. Future studies will distinguish temporal components of shoulder surgery that may optimize treatment targets of postoperative recovery.
肩部手术是治疗肩部疼痛的主要干预手段,但许多患者术后仍会持续疼痛。此前,我们发现被归类为具有高风险表型(由儿茶酚-O-甲基转移酶[COMT]变异和疼痛灾难化组成)的个体未达到12个月疼痛恢复标准的几率约为两倍。作为更好地理解术后肩部持续疼痛发展的一种方法,本研究通过基于潜在中介因素检查术后肩部恢复的时间顺序,并将结果扩展到包括运动诱发疼痛和肩部主动活动范围,推进了我们之前的工作。手术前,个体被分为高风险(高疼痛灾难化,COMT基因型与低酶活性相关[n = 41])或低风险(低疼痛灾难化,COMT基因型与正常酶活性相关[n = 107])。然后,我们比较了术后3、6和12个月的潜在中介变量:1)由条件性疼痛调制范式定义的内源性疼痛调制;2)以及焦虑、运动恐惧和抑郁症状等情绪因素。在3个月时,高风险亚组有更高的运动恐惧和运动诱发疼痛,因果中介分析证实了风险亚组对12个月运动诱发疼痛的直接影响。然而,发现抑郁症状从基线到12个月的变化介导了风险亚组对12个月运动诱发疼痛总效应的53%。本研究介绍了术后肩部持续疼痛发展的潜在时间成分和关系,未来的研究将对其进行确认并评估潜在的治疗靶点。观点:本研究扩展了术后肩部恢复措施,包括运动诱发疼痛和抑郁症状,并为预先确定的高风险亚组提供了术后肩部恢复时间顺序的初步指示。未来的研究将区分肩部手术的时间成分,这可能会优化术后恢复的治疗靶点。