Effects of pain-related catastrophic thinking, anxiety, and depression on pain intensity and quality of life in patients with knee and low back pain.
Journal of physical therapy science, ISSN: 0915-5287, Vol: 34, Issue: 9, Page: 625-629
2022
- 2Citations
- 22Captures
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Metrics Details
- Citations2
- Citation Indexes2
- CrossRef2
- Captures22
- Readers22
- 22
Article Description
[Purpose] We aimed to examine the effects of pain-related catastrophic thoughts and anxiety/depression on pain intensity and quality of life (QOL), and how these effects (relationships) vary with pain location, in outpatients with chronic pain. [Participants and Methods] We recruited 14 participants with low back pain (2 males and 12 females) and 14 with knee joint pain (3 males and 11 females). We used the following evaluation tools: the visual analog scale (to evaluate pain intensity), pain catastrophizing scale (in which scores are categorized into helplessness, rumination, and magnification), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (for psychodynamic evaluation), and a questionnaire for QOL evaluation. [Results] There was no difference in pain intensity between the groups. The "low back pain" group showed a positive correlation between pain intensity and anxiety, while the "knee pain" group showed a positive correlation between pain intensity and helplessness. The "low back pain" group showed a negative correlation between health in QOL assessment items and helplessness, and between health and magnification. However, in the "knee pain" group, there was a negative correlation between health and rumination, between health and anxiety, and between positive mental attitude and magnification. [Conclusion] Mental status varied depending on the pain location, regardless of the intensity of the pain. This suggests that a psychological approach dependent on pain location is needed during physical therapy.
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