Are Anxiety and Depression Taking Sides with Knee-Pain in Osteoarthritis?

Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) bears a potential of rendering patients unsatisfied with the operation as a result of negative affectivity related to osteoarthritis and TKA. Not only is pain a lateralized experience, but negative affect and other psychosomatic correlates of pain might also be processe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical medicine 2022-02, Vol.11 (4), p.1094
Hauptverfasser: Vogel, Matthias, Binneböse, Marius, Lohmann, Christoph H, Junne, Florian, Berth, Alexander, Riediger, Christian
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creator Vogel, Matthias
Binneböse, Marius
Lohmann, Christoph H
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Berth, Alexander
Riediger, Christian
description Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) bears a potential of rendering patients unsatisfied with the operation as a result of negative affectivity related to osteoarthritis and TKA. Not only is pain a lateralized experience, but negative affect and other psychosomatic correlates of pain might also be processed on grounds of lateralization. Lateralization in this context is likely linked to the amygdalae, which display differential left/right patterns of association with psychopathology. What is noteworthy is that osteoarthritis itself is linked not only to negative effects but also to childhood abuse. The present study tests lateralization of psychosomatic correlates of knee-pain using the brief symptom inventory-18 (BSI-18), the dissociative experiences scale (FDS-20), the pain catastrophizing scale (PCS), the Tampa scale of kinesiophobia (TSK), the childhood trauma screener (CTS) and WOMAC. More precisely, we were interested in predicting the side of operations by means of the above-mentioned constructs using binary logistic regression, based on 150 participants (78 left knees) awaiting TKA for knee-osteoarthritis. Somatization ( = 0.003), childhood abuse ( = 0.04) and pain-catastrophizing ( = 0.04) predicted operations on the right side. Anxiety ( = 0.001) and kinesiophobia ( = 0.002) predicted operations on the left side. Knee-pain may be differentially modulated by its psychosomatic correlates as a result of lateralization and corresponding patterns of psychosomatic reagibility.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Anxiety
Arthritis
Clinical medicine
Emotions
Fear & phobias
Hypotheses
Mental depression
Osteoarthritis
Pain
Psychopathology
Quantitative psychology
title Are Anxiety and Depression Taking Sides with Knee-Pain in Osteoarthritis?
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