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Increased sensitivity to physical activity among individuals with knee osteoarthritis: Relation to pain outcomes,psychological factors,and responses to quantitative sensory testing
Authors:Timothy H Wideman  Patrick H Finan  Robert R Edwards  Phillip J Quartana  Luis F Buenaver  Jennifer A Haythornthwaite  Michael T Smith
Institution:1. School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA;2. Department of Anaesthesia, Harvard School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA;3. Center for Military Psychiatry and Neurosciences Research, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA
Abstract:Recent findings suggest that certain individuals with musculoskeletal pain conditions have increased sensitivity to physical activity (SPA) and respond to activities of stable intensity with increasingly severe pain. This study aimed to determine the degree to which individuals with knee osteoarthritis (OA) show heightened SPA in response to a standardized walking task and whether SPA cross-sectionally predicts psychological factors, responses to quantitative sensory testing (QST), and different OA-related outcomes. One hundred seven adults with chronic knee OA completed self-report measures of pain, function, and psychological factors, underwent QST, and performed a 6-min walk test. Participants rated their discomfort levels throughout the walking task; an index of SPA was created by subtracting first ratings from peak ratings. Repeated-measure analysis of variance revealed that levels of discomfort significantly increased throughout the walking task. A series of hierarchical regression analyses determined that after controlling for significant covariates, psychological factors, and measures of mechanical pain sensitivity, individual variance in SPA predicted self-report pain and function and performance on the walking task. Analyses also revealed that both pain catastrophizing and the temporal summation of mechanical pain were significant predictors of SPA and that SPA mediated the relationship between catastrophizing and self-reported pain and physical function. The discussion addresses the potential processes contributing to SPA and the role it may play in predicting responses to different interventions for musculoskeletal pain conditions.
Keywords:Activity-related pain  Chronic pain  Depression  Knee osteoarthritis  Mechanical pain  Musculoskeletal pain  Pain catastrophizing  Pain threshold  Pain-related function  Physical activity  Psychological factors  Quantitative sensory testing  Sensitivity to physical activity  Temporal summation of pain
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