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Pain and health status in adults with myelomeningocele living in Sweden

Alriksson-Schmidt, Ann LU ; Josenby, Annika Lundkvist LU orcid ; Lindquist, Barbro and Westbom, Lena LU (2018) In Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine 11(4). p.255-264
Abstract

PURPOSE: To increase knowledge about pain and general health in adults with myelomeningocele, a health condition with several risk factors for pain such as musculoskeletal deformities, shunt dysfunctions, bowel problems, and urinary tract infections/stones. METHODS: Descriptive correlational pilot study (N= 51, 53% males). Chi-square tests were used to test associations among presence, impact, severity, and pain site in relation to sex and age. ANOVA was used to analyze associations between sex, age, and general health (today). RESULTS: Seventy-three percent reported pain in the past four weeks. No significant sex or age differences were associated with the presence of pain. Women were significantly more likely to report that pain... (More)

PURPOSE: To increase knowledge about pain and general health in adults with myelomeningocele, a health condition with several risk factors for pain such as musculoskeletal deformities, shunt dysfunctions, bowel problems, and urinary tract infections/stones. METHODS: Descriptive correlational pilot study (N= 51, 53% males). Chi-square tests were used to test associations among presence, impact, severity, and pain site in relation to sex and age. ANOVA was used to analyze associations between sex, age, and general health (today). RESULTS: Seventy-three percent reported pain in the past four weeks. No significant sex or age differences were associated with the presence of pain. Women were significantly more likely to report that pain interfered with work, ‡2(1, N= 41) = 5.53, p= 0.02. There were significant main effects for sex and age on general health (today), F(2, 44) = 5.63, p= 0.007, adjusted R2= 0.17. Women scored lower on general health (today) (mean = 63.58) than men (mean = 76.33). Older individuals reported worse general health (today) than did younger (B=-0.89, t=-2.79, p= 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: Pain was frequent, and pain sites differed widely. Women were more likely to report that pain interfered with work, and scored lower on health, as did older persons.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
adults, myelomeningocele, Pain, quality of life, self-reported health, spina bifida
in
Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine
volume
11
issue
4
pages
10 pages
publisher
IOS Press
external identifiers
  • pmid:30507588
  • scopus:85058860237
ISSN
1874-5393
DOI
10.3233/PRM-170517
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ae9c67b9-438c-457c-9bef-f23f09318386
date added to LUP
2019-01-08 12:50:50
date last changed
2024-06-11 02:04:05
@article{ae9c67b9-438c-457c-9bef-f23f09318386,
  abstract     = {{<p>PURPOSE: To increase knowledge about pain and general health in adults with myelomeningocele, a health condition with several risk factors for pain such as musculoskeletal deformities, shunt dysfunctions, bowel problems, and urinary tract infections/stones. METHODS: Descriptive correlational pilot study (N= 51, 53% males). Chi-square tests were used to test associations among presence, impact, severity, and pain site in relation to sex and age. ANOVA was used to analyze associations between sex, age, and general health (today). RESULTS: Seventy-three percent reported pain in the past four weeks. No significant sex or age differences were associated with the presence of pain. Women were significantly more likely to report that pain interfered with work, ‡2(1, N= 41) = 5.53, p= 0.02. There were significant main effects for sex and age on general health (today), F(2, 44) = 5.63, p= 0.007, adjusted R2= 0.17. Women scored lower on general health (today) (mean = 63.58) than men (mean = 76.33). Older individuals reported worse general health (today) than did younger (B=-0.89, t=-2.79, p= 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: Pain was frequent, and pain sites differed widely. Women were more likely to report that pain interfered with work, and scored lower on health, as did older persons.</p>}},
  author       = {{Alriksson-Schmidt, Ann and Josenby, Annika Lundkvist and Lindquist, Barbro and Westbom, Lena}},
  issn         = {{1874-5393}},
  keywords     = {{adults; myelomeningocele; Pain; quality of life; self-reported health; spina bifida}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{255--264}},
  publisher    = {{IOS Press}},
  series       = {{Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine}},
  title        = {{Pain and health status in adults with myelomeningocele living in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/PRM-170517}},
  doi          = {{10.3233/PRM-170517}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}