Multiple diagnoses, increased kinesiophobia? - Patients with high kinesiophobia levels showed a greater number of temporomandibular disorder diagnoses

AbstractObjectivesThe aim of this study was to empirically derive subgroups according to pain-related fear of movement beliefs using cluster analysis within a sample of TMD patients and asymptomatic volunteers. Methods129 volunteers participated in this cross-sectional study (34.78, standard deviati...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Musculoskeletal science & practice 2019-12, Vol.44 (NA), p.102054-102054, Article 102054
Hauptverfasser: Lira, Mariana Romano, Lemes da Silva, Roberta Rodrigues, Bataglion, César, Aguiar, Aroldo dos Santos, Greghi, Stella Maris, Chaves, Thaís Cristina
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:AbstractObjectivesThe aim of this study was to empirically derive subgroups according to pain-related fear of movement beliefs using cluster analysis within a sample of TMD patients and asymptomatic volunteers. Methods129 volunteers participated in this cross-sectional study (34.78, standard deviation [SD]: 12.49 years; 92 TMD patients and 37 symptom-free volunteers). Mechanical pain sensitivity through pressure pain threshold (PPT) on orofacial and remote sites, kinesiophobia, pain catastrophizing, anxiety and depression were assessed. A cluster analysis was used to derive subgroups according to kinesiophobia scores (TSK/TMD). ResultsThree subgroups were derived: cluster 1 (high kinesiophobia [n = 53], TSK score: 33, SD[standard deviation] = 2.9), cluster 2 (moderate kinesiophobia [n = 50], TSK score: 26.2, SD = 2.14) and cluster 3 (no/low kinesiophobia [n = 26], TSK score 12.12, SD = 2.08) which included patients with higher overall PPT and lower scores on psychosocial variables. The group with high kinesiophobia showed high levels of pain catastrophizing, anxiety, and orofacial pain-related disability compared to the other subgroups and mechanical pain hyperalgesia in remote site compared to the low-kinesiophobia group. Also, we found a greater prevalence of triple diagnosis for the high-kinesiophobia subgroup compared to the moderate kinesiophobia group - odds ratio: 12.6 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.31–43.52, p 
ISSN:2468-7812
2468-8630
2468-7812
DOI:10.1016/j.msksp.2019.102054