Dr STEPHANIE SMITH STEPHANIE.SMITH2@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOW
Central aspects of pain associated with physical activity: results from the IMH&W cohort
Smith, Stephanie; Habib, Muhammad; Chaplin, Wendy; Millar, Bonnie; McWilliams, Daniel; Walsh, David
Authors
Muhammad Habib
Ms WENDY CHAPLIN Wendy.Chaplin1@nottingham.ac.uk
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
Bonnie Millar
Dr DANIEL MCWILLIAMS DAN.MCWILLIAMS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOW
Professor DAVID WALSH david.walsh@nottingham.ac.uk
PROFESSOR OF RHEUMATOLOGY
Abstract
Background:
Knee pain reduces activity, while inactivity can increase pain. The central nervous system modulates both pain and activity. The 8-item Central Aspects of Pain (CAP) questionnaire measures self-reported symptoms associated with current and future knee pain severity and psychophysical evidence of central pain sensitivity. The objective was to explore associations between CAP and physical inactivity in people with knee pain.
Methods
Participants from the Investigating Musculoskeletal Health and Wellbeing cohort who reported their knee as their most troublesome joint with numerical rating scale pain severity ≥1/10 completed questionnaires at baseline and 12-months addressing demographic and clinical characteristics, CAP questionnaire and physical inactivity (Frail Non-Disabled (FiND) questionnaire item). Chi-squared, correlations and multivariable logistic regression were performed.
Results:
722 participants provided baseline and 404 longitudinal data. Higher baseline CAP scores were associated with higher baseline pain severity (OR 1.25 (95%CI 1.02, 1.53) p=0.032) and physical inactivity (OR 1.18 (95%CI 1.11, 1.25) p<0.001). Increasing CAP scores over 12 months were associated with becoming physically inactive (OR 1.16 (95%CI 1.01, 1.32) p=0.032). The effects of CAP on physical inactivity were not fully explained by pain severity, nor by any single characteristic of widespread pain distribution, emotional or cognitive factors, sleep disturbance or fatigue.
Conclusions:
CAP displays cross-sectional and longitudinal associations with physical inactivity. Central nervous system manifestations of pain appear to link pain with physical activity and may be more important than pain severity.
Citation
Smith, S., Habib, M., Chaplin, W., Millar, B., McWilliams, D., & Walsh, D. (in press). Central aspects of pain associated with physical activity: results from the IMH&W cohort. PAIN Reports,
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Feb 24, 2025 |
Deposit Date | Mar 3, 2025 |
Journal | PAIN Reports |
Electronic ISSN | 2471-2531 |
Publisher | Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/46165475 |
This file is under embargo due to copyright reasons.
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