External Factors Modulating Pain and Pain-Related Functional Impairment in Cervical Dystonia.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Movement Disorders Clinical Practice Pub Date : 2024-10-23 DOI:10.1002/mdc3.14235
Davide Martino, Beatrice M C Achen, Francesca Morgante, Roberto Erro, Susan H Fox, Mark J Edwards, Anette Schrag, Maria Stamelou, Silke Appel-Cresswell, Giovanni Defazio, Kallol Ray-Chaudhuri, Karolina Poplawska-Domaszewicz, Sarah Pirio Richardson, Hyder A Jinnah, Veronica A Bruno
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Abstract

Background: Little is known about factors modulating pain and pain-related functional impairment in isolated cervical dystonia (CD).

Objective: The aim was to assess the prevalence and interrelationship between pain-modulating factors and pain-related determinants of functional impairment and quality of life in CD.

Methods: We analyzed pain-aggravating and pain-relieving external factors, the degree of pain-related functional impact on routine activities, and the relationship between these and pain severity, using cross-sectional data collected using the Pain in Dystonia Scale (PIDS) from 85 participants with CD. Pairwise correlation analyses and age- and sex-adjusted linear regression models estimated the relationship between pain-modulating factors and pain severity, and the impact of pain severity, dystonia severity, and psychiatric symptoms on pain-related functional impairment and disease-specific quality of life (measured using the Craniocervical Dystonia Questionnaire-24).

Results: Stress and prolonged fixed position were the most frequent and impacting pain triggers, with women reporting larger impact. The average impact of pain-relieving factors was lower than that of pain triggers. Physical exercise and social gatherings were the most impacted activities by pain in CD. The intensity of external modulating factors was a predictor of pain severity. Severity of pain, CD, and psychiatric symptoms independently predicted pain-related functional impairment, whereas quality of life was predicted by pain severity, pain-related functional impairment, and psychiatric symptom severity, but not dystonia severity.

Conclusion: The PIDS provides insight into external modulation and functional impact of pain in CD. The pattern of external modulation of pain in CD is in line with a multifactorial modulation and complex physiology.

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调节颈性肌张力障碍患者疼痛和疼痛相关功能障碍的外部因素
背景:人们对孤立性颈肌张力障碍(CD)患者的疼痛调节因素和与疼痛相关的功能障碍知之甚少:目的:评估CD患者疼痛调节因素和与疼痛相关的功能障碍及生活质量决定因素的发生率和相互关系:我们使用肌张力障碍疼痛量表(PIDS)收集了 85 名 CD 患者的横断面数据,分析了加重疼痛和缓解疼痛的外部因素、疼痛相关功能对日常活动的影响程度以及这些因素与疼痛严重程度之间的关系。配对相关分析以及年龄和性别调整线性回归模型估算了疼痛调节因素与疼痛严重程度之间的关系,以及疼痛严重程度、肌张力障碍严重程度和精神症状对疼痛相关功能障碍和疾病特异性生活质量(使用颅颈肌张力障碍问卷-24测量)的影响:结果:压力和长时间固定姿势是最常见、影响最大的疼痛诱因,女性报告的影响更大。缓解疼痛因素的平均影响低于疼痛诱因。体育锻炼和社交聚会是 CD 疼痛影响最大的活动。外部调节因素的强度可预测疼痛的严重程度。疼痛、CD和精神症状的严重程度可独立预测与疼痛相关的功能障碍,而生活质量可由疼痛严重程度、与疼痛相关的功能障碍和精神症状严重程度预测,但肌张力障碍严重程度不能预测:结论:PIDS有助于了解CD患者疼痛的外部调节和功能影响。CD患者疼痛的外部调节模式与多因素调节和复杂的生理学相一致。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.50%
发文量
218
期刊介绍: Movement Disorders Clinical Practice- is an online-only journal committed to publishing high quality peer reviewed articles related to clinical aspects of movement disorders which broadly include phenomenology (interesting case/case series/rarities), investigative (for e.g- genetics, imaging), translational (phenotype-genotype or other) and treatment aspects (clinical guidelines, diagnostic and treatment algorithms)
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