Suer Michael, Philips Nicholas, Kliethermes Stephanie, Scerpella Tamara, Sehgal Nalini
Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
Department of Anesthesia, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
Pain Physician. 2022 Mar;25(2):E285-E292.
Chronic postsurgical pain remains a major hurdle in postoperative management, especially in patients undergoing shoulder surgery, for whom persistent pain rates are higher than for any other surgical site. Little is known about pain beliefs and attitudes as preoperative predictors of postoperative pain following nonarthroplasty shoulder surgery.
We evaluated predictors of pain following nonarthroplasty shoulder surgery, hypothesizing that preoperative kinesiophobia, pain catastrophizing, and neuropathic pain scores are predictive of greater postoperative pain.
Case control study.
Division of Sports Medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.
Consecutive patients aged 18 and older undergoing a nonarthroplasty shoulder operation were selected. At the preoperative appointment and 3 months postoperative, patients completed the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2 to assess severity and quality of pain, the painDetect Questionnaire to screen for neuropathic pain, the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia to assess fear of movement and fear-avoidance beliefs, and the Pain Catastrophizing Scale to gauge rumination, magnification, and pessimism. A univariable negative binomial regression model was used to identify associations between preoperative predictors and postoperative scores, reporting risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals.
Eighty-one patients completed the preoperative surveys and 43 patients completed at least one postoperative survey. The median pain score decreased from 3 out of 10 (interquartile range [IQR] = 2-5) in the preoperative group to one (IQR = 0-2) in the postoperative group (P < 0.001). Mean kinesiophobia scores decreased from 40.44 (standard deviation [SD] = 5.94) preoperatively to 35.40 (SD = 6.44) postoperatively (P < 0.001). Median pain catastrophizing scores decreased from 7 (IQR = 2-17]) preoperatively to 2 (IQR = 0-11]) postoperatively (P = 0.005). No significant changes in neuropathic pain scores were observed. Higher baseline kinesiophobia scores were associated with greater postoperative pain (risk ratio = 1.09, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.01 to 1.18), P = 0.03), as were higher pain catastrophizing scores (risk ratio = 1.05, 95% CI = 1.01 to 1.08), P = 0.01). No association between baseline neuropathic pain and degree of postoperative pain was identified.
Limitations of the study include a single institution with multiple surgeons and types of surgery. The study drop-out rate was relatively high.
This study suggests that greater baseline kinesiophobia and pain catastrophizing are predictive of greater postoperative pain following nonarthroplasty shoulder surgery in an adult population.
慢性术后疼痛仍然是术后管理中的一个主要障碍,尤其是在接受肩部手术的患者中,其持续疼痛发生率高于其他任何手术部位。对于非关节置换肩部手术后疼痛的术前预测因素,人们对疼痛信念和态度知之甚少。
我们评估了非关节置换肩部手术后疼痛的预测因素,假设术前运动恐惧、疼痛灾难化和神经性疼痛评分可预测术后更严重的疼痛。
病例对照研究。
威斯康星大学医学院和公共卫生学院运动医学科。
选取18岁及以上接受非关节置换肩部手术的连续患者。在术前预约时和术后3个月,患者完成简短麦吉尔疼痛问卷 - 2以评估疼痛的严重程度和性质,完成疼痛检测问卷以筛查神经性疼痛,完成坦帕运动恐惧量表以评估对运动的恐惧和恐惧回避信念,以及完成疼痛灾难化量表以衡量沉思、放大和悲观情绪。使用单变量负二项回归模型来确定术前预测因素与术后评分之间的关联,报告风险比和95%置信区间。
81名患者完成了术前调查,43名患者完成了至少一项术后调查。术前组的疼痛评分中位数从10分中的3分(四分位间距[IQR]=2 - 5)降至术后组的1分(IQR = 0 - 2)(P < 0.001)。运动恐惧平均评分从术前的40.44(标准差[SD]=5.94)降至术后的35.40(SD = 6.44)(P < 0.001)。疼痛灾难化评分中位数从术前的7分(IQR = 2 - 17)降至术后的2分(IQR = 0 - 11)(P = 0.005)。未观察到神经性疼痛评分有显著变化。较高的基线运动恐惧评分与术后更严重的疼痛相关(风险比 = 1.09,95%置信区间[CI]=1.01至1.18,P = 0.03),较高的疼痛灾难化评分也是如此(风险比 = 1.05,95%CI = 1.01至1.08,P = 0.01)。未发现基线神经性疼痛与术后疼痛程度之间存在关联。
本研究的局限性包括单一机构、多位外科医生以及多种手术类型。研究的失访率相对较高。
本研究表明,在成年人群中,较高的基线运动恐惧和疼痛灾难化可预测非关节置换肩部手术后更严重的术后疼痛。