• J Pain Symptom Manage · May 2009

    Pain catastrophizing and pain-related fear in osteoarthritis patients: relationships to pain and disability.

    • Tamara J Somers, Francis J Keefe, Jennifer J Pells, Kim E Dixon, Sandra J Waters, Paul A Riordan, James A Blumenthal, Daphne C McKee, Lara LaCaille, Jessica M Tucker, Daniel Schmitt, David S Caldwell, Virginia B Kraus, Ershela L Sims, Rebecca A Shelby, and John R Rice.
    • Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009 May 1; 37 (5): 863-72.

    AbstractThis study examined the degree to which pain catastrophizing and pain-related fear explain pain, psychological disability, physical disability, and walking speed in patients with osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Participants in this study were 106 individuals diagnosed as having OA of at least one knee, who reported knee pain persisting for six months or longer. Results suggest that pain catastrophizing explained a significant proportion (all Ps < or = 0.05) of variance in measures of pain (partial r(2) [pr(2)] = 0.10), psychological disability (pr(2) = 0.20), physical disability (pr(2) = 0.11), and gait velocity at normal (pr(2) = 0.04), fast (pr(2) = 0.04), and intermediate speeds (pr(2) = 0.04). Pain-related fear explained a significant proportion of the variance in measures of psychological disability (pr(2) = 0.07) and walking at a fast speed (pr(2) = 0.05). Pain cognitions, particularly pain catastrophizing, appear to be important variables in understanding pain, disability, and walking at normal, fast, and intermediate speeds in knee OA patients. Clinicians interested in understanding variations in pain and disability in this population may benefit by expanding the focus of their inquiries beyond traditional medical and demographic variables to include an assessment of pain catastrophizing and pain-related fear.

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