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Pain-Related Fear Contributes to Self-Reported Disability in Patients With Foot and Ankle Pathology
Authors:Trevor A. Lentz  Zach Sutton  Scott Greenberg  Mark D. Bishop
Affiliation:a Shands Rehabilitation, UF & Shands Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine Institute, Gainesville, FL
b Shands Rehabilitation, Magnolia Parke, Gainesville, FL
c Department of Physical Therapy, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
Abstract:Lentz TA, Sutton Z, Greenberg S, Bishop MD. Pain-related fear contributes to self-reported disability in patients with foot and ankle pathology.

Objective

To determine the unique influence of pain-related fear of movement on foot and ankle disability, after accounting for pain, demographic, and physical impairment variables.

Design

Cross-sectional study using retrospective chart review.

Setting

Outpatient rehabilitation clinic.

Participants

Referred sample of subjects with foot- and ankle-related disability (N=85, 40 men; mean age, 33y; range, 16-77y).

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

Lower Extremity Functional Scale (LEFS), Shortened Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK-11).

Results

Hierarchical regression analysis determined the proportions of explained variance in disability (LEFS). Demographic variables were entered into the model first, followed by pain intensity and range-of-motion (ROM) deficit, and finally, TSK-11. Demographics collectively contributed 9% (P=.015) of the variance in disability scores. Pain intensity and overall ROM deficit contributed an additional 11% (P<.001) of the variance, and TSK-11 scores contributed an additional 14% (P<.001). In the overall model, age (β=−.29, P=.004), chronicity of symptoms (β=.23, P=.024), ROM deficit (β=−.28, P=.003), and TSK-11 (β=−.41, P<.001) explained 34% of the variance in the LEFS score (P<.001).

Conclusions

Age, chronicity of symptoms, ROM deficit, and TSK-11 scores all significantly contributed to baseline foot and ankle self-reported disability. Pain-related fear of movement was the strongest single contributor to disability in this group of patients.
Keywords:Ankle   Fear   Foot   Psychology   Rehabilitation
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