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Effect of pain location and duration on life function in the year after motor vehicle collision
Author(s) -
Andrey V. Bortsov,
Timothy F. PlattsMills,
David A. Peak,
J. Stephen Jones,
Robert A. Swor,
Robert M. Domeier,
Dong Hoon Lee,
Niels K. Rathlev,
Phyllis L. Hendry,
Roger B. Fillingim,
Samuel A. McLean
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
pain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.524
H-Index - 258
eISSN - 1872-6623
pISSN - 0304-3959
DOI - 10.1016/j.pain.2014.06.013
Subject(s) - brief pain inventory , medicine , physical therapy , prospective cohort study , neck pain , pain catastrophizing , physical medicine and rehabilitation , repeated measures design , longitudinal study , chronic pain , surgery , alternative medicine , pathology , statistics , mathematics
Persistent musculoskeletal pain is common after motor vehicle collision (MVC) and often results in substantial disability. The objective of this study was to identify distributions of post-MVC pain that most interfere with specific life functions and that have the greatest interference with aggregate life function. Study data were obtained from a prospective longitudinal multicenter emergency department-based cohort of 948 European Americans experiencing MVC. Overall pain (0-10 numeric rating scale [NRS]), pain in each of 20 body regions (0-10 NRS), and pain interference (Brief Pain Inventory, 0-10 NRS) were assessed 6 weeks, 6 months, and 1 year after MVC. After adjustment for overall pain intensity, an axial distribution of pain caused the greatest interference with most specific life functions (R(2)=0.15-0.28, association P values of <.001) and with overall function. Axial pain explained more than twice as much variance in pain interference as other pain distributions. However, not all patients with axial pain had neck pain. Moderate or severe low back pain was as common as neck pain at week 6 (prevalence 37% for each) and overlapped with neck pain in only 23% of patients. Further, pain across all body regions accounted for nearly twice as much of the variance in pain interference as neck pain alone (60% vs 34%). These findings suggest that studies of post-MVC pain should not focus on neck pain alone.

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