Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie St., Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1, Canada.
Université du Québec À Trois-Rivières, 3351 boulevard des Forges, Trois-Rivières, QC, Canada.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2022 Mar 24;23(1):283. doi: 10.1186/s12891-022-05214-y.
While pain is often the focus of clinical interventions, other clinical outcomes (e.g., discomfort, stiffness) might also contribute to patients' functionality and well-being. Although researchers and clinicians may view discomfort, pain and stiffness as different constructs, it remains unclear how patients perceive and differentiate between these constructs. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore patients' perceptions of pain, discomfort, and stiffness.
Chiropractic patients were invited to complete an online cross-sectional survey and describe what 'discomfort', 'pain' and 'stiffness' meant to them using their own words. Lexical and inductive qualitative content analyses were conducted independently and then triangulated.
Fifty-three chiropractic patients (47.2% female, mean age: 39.1 ± 15.1 years) responded. The most common combinations of words to describe discomfort were "can be ignored" and "less severe than". "Cannot be ignored" and "sharp shooting" were used to describe pain. "Limited range of motion" was used to describe stiffness. Qualitatively, five themes were developed: impact, character, feeling, intensity and temporality. Stiffness was described as limited movement/mobility. Although discomfort and stiffness impacted patients' activities, patients remained functional; pain was described as stopping/limiting activities. Discomfort was described as dull and tingling, pain as sharp and shooting, and stiffness as tight and restricted. Patients felt displeased and annoyed when experiencing discomfort and stiffness but hurt and in danger of harm when experiencing pain. Discomfort and stiffness were described as less intense than pain, with shorter/intermittent duration; however, all constructs could be experienced constantly.
Patients perceived discomfort, pain and stiffness as different, yet overlapping constructs. This preliminary work advances our knowledge of how patients conceptualize these constructs, contributing to better understanding of what patients mean when reporting these experiences, potentially improving the clinician-patient communication.
虽然疼痛通常是临床干预的重点,但其他临床结果(如不适、僵硬)也可能影响患者的功能和幸福感。尽管研究人员和临床医生可能将不适、疼痛和僵硬视为不同的结构,但患者如何感知和区分这些结构仍不清楚。因此,本研究旨在探讨患者对疼痛、不适和僵硬的感知。
脊医患者受邀完成一项在线横断面调查,并使用自己的语言描述“不适”、“疼痛”和“僵硬”的含义。词汇和归纳定性内容分析独立进行,然后进行三角测量。
53 名脊医患者(47.2%为女性,平均年龄:39.1±15.1 岁)做出回应。描述不适时最常见的组合词是“可以忽略”和“不如”。“无法忽略”和“尖锐刺痛”用于描述疼痛。“活动范围有限”用于描述僵硬。定性分析得出五个主题:影响、特征、感觉、强度和时间性。僵硬被描述为运动/活动受限。尽管不适和僵硬会影响患者的活动,但患者仍保持功能;疼痛被描述为停止/限制活动。不适被描述为钝痛和刺痛,疼痛被描述为尖锐刺痛,僵硬被描述为紧绷和受限。患者在感到不适和僵硬时感到不快和烦恼,但在感到疼痛时感到受伤和有受伤的危险。不适和僵硬的强度比疼痛低,持续时间较短/间歇性;然而,所有的结构都可能持续存在。
患者认为不适、疼痛和僵硬是不同的,但又相互重叠的结构。这项初步研究增进了我们对患者如何概念化这些结构的理解,有助于更好地理解患者在报告这些体验时的含义,从而可能改善医患沟通。