Trajectories of musculoskeletal shoulder pain after spinal cord injury: Identification and predictors

IE Eriks-Hoogland, T Hoekstra, S de Groot… - The journal of spinal …, 2014 - Taylor & Francis
The journal of spinal cord medicine, 2014Taylor & Francis
Abstract Objective/Background Although shoulder pain is a problem in up to 86% of persons
with a spinal cord injury (SCI), so far, no studies have empirically identified longitudinal
patterns (trajectories) of musculoskeletal shoulder pain after SCI. The objective of this study
was:(1) to identify distinct trajectories of musculoskeletal shoulder pain in persons with SCI,
and (2) to determine possible predictors of these trajectories. Design/Methods Multicenter,
prospective cohort study in 225 newly injured persons with SCI. Outcome Measure Shoulder …
Abstract
Objective/Background
Although shoulder pain is a problem in up to 86% of persons with a spinal cord injury (SCI), so far, no studies have empirically identified longitudinal patterns (trajectories) of musculoskeletal shoulder pain after SCI. The objective of this study was: (1) to identify distinct trajectories of musculoskeletal shoulder pain in persons with SCI, and (2) to determine possible predictors of these trajectories.
Design/Methods
Multicenter, prospective cohort study in 225 newly injured persons with SCI.
Outcome Measure
Shoulder pain was assessed on five occasions up to 5 years after discharge. Latent class growth mixture modeling was used to identify the distinct shoulder pain trajectories.
Results
Three distinct shoulder pain trajectories were identified: (1) a “No or Low pain” trajectory (64%), (2) a “High pain” (30%) trajectory, and (3) a trajectory with a “Decrease of pain” (6%). Compared with the “No or Low pain” pain trajectory, the “High pain” trajectory consisted of more persons with tetraplegia, shoulder pain before injury, limited shoulder range of motion (ROM), lower manual muscle test scores, or more spasticity at t1. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed two significant predictors for the “High pain” trajectory (as compared with the “No or Low pain” trajectory): having a tetraplegia (odds ratio (OR) = 3.2; P = 0.002) and having limited shoulder ROM (OR = 2.8; P = 0.007).
Conclusion
Shoulder pain in people with SCI follows distinct trajectories. At risk for belonging to the “High pain” trajectory are persons with tetraplegia and those with a limited shoulder ROM at start of active rehabilitation.
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