A case-control study of risk factors for arm pain presenting to primary care services
A case-control study of risk factors for arm pain presenting to primary care services
Objectives: To investigate the association of occupational activities, mental health and comorbidity with care seeking for arm pain, and to test the hypothesis that specific disorders arise from physical risk factors and non-specific pain from psychological ones.
Methods: Patients with a new episode of arm pain and matched controls were recruited from eight general practices. A questionnaire about risk factors was completed and cases were classified using a validated examination schedule. Questions were asked about occupational activities and psychosocial stressors. Mental health was assessed using the Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, elements of the Brief Symptom Inventory (somatizing tendency) and the Whiteley Index (health anxiety); comorbidity from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and chronic widespread pain (CWP) was ascertained using standard definitions. Associations were explored using logistic regression and summarized as odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs).
Results: Altogether, 132 cases and 127 controls were studied. Consulting with arm pain was strongly associated with all of the mental health variables and with CFS and CWP, irrespective of the site of arm pain or diagnosis. The OR in those with >3 versus <3 distressing somatic symptoms was 3.9 (95% CI 1.7–9.0). There were several significant associations with physical activity, but none with occupational psychosocial stressors. Repeated wrist/finger movements and carrying weights were more strongly associated with specific diagnoses than with non-specific pain.
Conclusions: Somatizing tendency, health anxiety, low mood, CFS and CWP are more common in arm pain consulters. Certain mechanical activities are also overrepresented, particularly in those with specific pathology.
arm pain, functional syndromes, mental health, somatizing
137-143
Ryall, Claire
ad80f40b-63b2-45a0-b958-c1d1bbc28440
Coggon, David
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Peveler, Robert
93198224-78d9-4c1f-9c07-fdecfa69cf96
Reading, Isabel
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Palmer, Keith T.
0cfe63f0-1d33-40ff-ae8c-6c33601df850
2006
Ryall, Claire
ad80f40b-63b2-45a0-b958-c1d1bbc28440
Coggon, David
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Peveler, Robert
93198224-78d9-4c1f-9c07-fdecfa69cf96
Reading, Isabel
6f832276-87b7-4a76-a9ed-b4b3df0a3f66
Palmer, Keith T.
0cfe63f0-1d33-40ff-ae8c-6c33601df850
Ryall, Claire, Coggon, David, Peveler, Robert, Reading, Isabel and Palmer, Keith T.
(2006)
A case-control study of risk factors for arm pain presenting to primary care services.
Occupational Medicine, 56 (2), .
(doi:10.1093/occmed/kqj024).
Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the association of occupational activities, mental health and comorbidity with care seeking for arm pain, and to test the hypothesis that specific disorders arise from physical risk factors and non-specific pain from psychological ones.
Methods: Patients with a new episode of arm pain and matched controls were recruited from eight general practices. A questionnaire about risk factors was completed and cases were classified using a validated examination schedule. Questions were asked about occupational activities and psychosocial stressors. Mental health was assessed using the Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, elements of the Brief Symptom Inventory (somatizing tendency) and the Whiteley Index (health anxiety); comorbidity from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and chronic widespread pain (CWP) was ascertained using standard definitions. Associations were explored using logistic regression and summarized as odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs).
Results: Altogether, 132 cases and 127 controls were studied. Consulting with arm pain was strongly associated with all of the mental health variables and with CFS and CWP, irrespective of the site of arm pain or diagnosis. The OR in those with >3 versus <3 distressing somatic symptoms was 3.9 (95% CI 1.7–9.0). There were several significant associations with physical activity, but none with occupational psychosocial stressors. Repeated wrist/finger movements and carrying weights were more strongly associated with specific diagnoses than with non-specific pain.
Conclusions: Somatizing tendency, health anxiety, low mood, CFS and CWP are more common in arm pain consulters. Certain mechanical activities are also overrepresented, particularly in those with specific pathology.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
arm pain, functional syndromes, mental health, somatizing
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 24497
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/24497
ISSN: 0962-7480
PURE UUID: 9383ec41-22b5-4377-929c-ab1108e12f1a
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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:02
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Contributors
Author:
Claire Ryall
Author:
David Coggon
Author:
Isabel Reading
Author:
Keith T. Palmer
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