The prevalence of foot pain and association with baseline characteristics in people participating in education and supervised exercise for knee or hip osteoarthritis: a cross-sectional study of 26,003 participants from the GLA:D® registry.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Journal of Foot and Ankle Research Pub Date : 2023-11-23 DOI:10.1186/s13047-023-00673-5
Lucy S Gates, Lindsey Cherry, Dorte T Grønne, Ewa M Roos, Søren T Skou
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Abstract

Background: Osteoarthritis (OA) affecting the knee or hip is highly prevalent in the general population and has associated high disease burden. Early identification of modifiable risk factors that prevent, limit, or resolve disease symptoms is critical. Foot pain may represent a potentially modifiable factor however little is known about the prevalence of foot pain in people with knee or hip OA nor whether foot pain is associated with clinical characteristics. The main aim of this study was therefore to determine the prevalence of foot pain in people with knee or hip OA attending an education and supervised exercise-based intervention in Denmark (GLA:D®) and determine if baseline demographic or clinical characteristics are associated with foot pain.

Methods: Analysis was conducted on baseline data of 26,003 people with symptomatic knee or hip OA completing a pain mannequin as part of the Good Life with osteoArthritis in Denmark (GLA:D®) primary care programme. Odds Ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated to estimate the strength of association between baseline clinical characteristics (including pain severity in worst knee/hip joint, number of painful knee/hip joints, pain medication use and physical activity level) and the presence of baseline foot pain.

Results: Twelve percent of participants (n = 3,049) reported foot pain. In those people with index knee OA (n = 19,391), knee pain severity (OR 1.01 CI 1.00, 1.01), number of painful knee/hip joints (OR 1.67 CI 1.58, 1.79), and use of pain medication (OR 1.23 CI 1.12, 1.36) were statistically associated with foot pain. Excluding use of pain medication, similar associations were seen in those with index hip OA.

Conclusion: Twelve percent of people with knee or hip OA participating in GLA:D® had foot pain. Those with worse knee/hip pain, and greater number of painful joints were more likely to report foot pain. This study is the first to demonstrate a significant relationship between clinical characteristics and foot pain in people with knee or hip OA participating in education and supervised exercise. Future investigation should consider the role that foot pain may play on knee and hip related outcomes following therapeutic intervention.

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参加膝关节或髋关节骨关节炎教育和监督运动的人群中足部疼痛的患病率及其与基线特征的关系:来自GLA:D®注册的26,003名参与者的横断面研究。
背景:影响膝关节或髋关节的骨关节炎(OA)在普通人群中非常普遍,并具有相关的高疾病负担。早期识别预防、限制或解决疾病症状的可改变风险因素至关重要。足部疼痛可能是一个潜在的可改变的因素,但对于膝关节或髋关节OA患者足部疼痛的患病率以及足部疼痛是否与临床特征相关知之甚少。因此,本研究的主要目的是确定参加丹麦教育和监督运动干预(GLA:D®)的膝关节或髋关节OA患者足部疼痛的患病率,并确定基线人口统计学或临床特征是否与足部疼痛相关。方法:对26003例有症状的膝关节或髋关节骨关节炎患者的基线数据进行分析,这些患者完成了一个疼痛模型,作为丹麦骨关节炎美好生活(GLA:D®)初级保健计划的一部分。计算优势比(OR)和95%置信区间(CI)来估计基线临床特征(包括最严重膝关节/髋关节疼痛严重程度、疼痛膝关节/髋关节数量、止痛药使用和身体活动水平)与基线足部疼痛存在之间的关联强度。结果:12%的参与者(n = 3049)报告了足部疼痛。在那些患有膝关节炎的患者中(n = 19,391),膝关节疼痛的严重程度(OR 1.01 CI 1.00, 1.01)、膝关节/髋关节疼痛的数量(OR 1.67 CI 1.58, 1.79)和止痛药的使用(OR 1.23 CI 1.12, 1.36)与足部疼痛有统计学相关性。排除止痛药的使用,在髋关节关节炎患者中也有类似的关联。结论:参加GLA:D®的膝关节或髋关节OA患者中有12%有足部疼痛。那些膝盖/臀部疼痛更严重,关节疼痛更多的人更有可能报告足部疼痛。这项研究首次证明了参与教育和监督运动的膝关节或髋关节OA患者的临床特征与足部疼痛之间的显著关系。未来的研究应考虑足部疼痛在治疗干预后对膝关节和髋关节相关结果的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
83
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, the official journal of the Australian Podiatry Association and The College of Podiatry (UK), is an open access journal that encompasses all aspects of policy, organisation, delivery and clinical practice related to the assessment, diagnosis, prevention and management of foot and ankle disorders. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research covers a wide range of clinical subject areas, including diabetology, paediatrics, sports medicine, gerontology and geriatrics, foot surgery, physical therapy, dermatology, wound management, radiology, biomechanics and bioengineering, orthotics and prosthetics, as well the broad areas of epidemiology, policy, organisation and delivery of services related to foot and ankle care. The journal encourages submissions from all health professionals who manage lower limb conditions, including podiatrists, nurses, physical therapists and physiotherapists, orthopaedists, manual therapists, medical specialists and general medical practitioners, as well as health service researchers concerned with foot and ankle care. The Australian Podiatry Association and the College of Podiatry (UK) have reserve funds to cover the article-processing charge for manuscripts submitted by its members. Society members can email the appropriate contact at Australian Podiatry Association or The College of Podiatry to obtain the corresponding code to enter on submission.
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