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Physical and psychosocial disability in elderly subjects in relation to pain in the hip and/or knee.
- M Hopman-Rock, E Odding, A Hofman, F W Kraaimaat, and J W Bijlsma.
- TNO Prevention and Health, Division of Public Health and Prevention, Leiden, The Netherlands.
- J Rheumatol. 1996 Jun 1; 23 (6): 1037-44.
ObjectiveTo determine physical and psychosocial disability in subjects aged 55 to 74 years living in the community, in relation to pain in the hip and/or knee, and to explore the relationships between pain, physical and psychosocial disability, and selected background variables.MethodsA subsample from a community based study on pain, disability, and radiological osteoarthritis (ROA) was used to identify groups with sporadic, episodic, and chronic pain and a reference group. Disability was assessed with the Sickness Impact Profile. Data were available for 306 subjects (response 83%).ResultsThe mean physical disability in the group with chronic (and more severe) pain (N = 59) was 5.4 times and psychosocial disability was 3.6 times higher than those of a reference group (N = 72). The body mass index, the existence of extra mobility problems, and ROA were independently positively related to physical disability. Male sex, having extra mobility problems, and moderate ROA were independently positively related to psychosocial disability.ConclusionSubjects with more chronic (and severe) pain in the hip and/or knee had relatively high levels of physical as well as psychosocial disability, compared to a reference group without any signs of OA. Pain chronicity had no significant contribution to physical disability, if corrected for other factors. Both forms of disability in subjects with pain were better predicted by ROA and by problems other than pain in the hip or knee alone, than by the chronicity of the pain.
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