1. Clinical characteristics differ between patients with non-traumatic neck pain, patients with whiplash-associated disorders, and pain-free individuals
- Author
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Martijn S. Stenneberg, Carlien S den Uil, Margreet E Wildeman, Rob A. de Bie, Gwendolyne G M Scholten-Peeters, Emiel van Trijffel, RS: CAPHRI - R3 - Functioning, Participating and Rehabilitation, Epidemiologie, Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy, Experimental Anatomy, Neuromechanics, AMS - Musculoskeletal Health, and AMS - Rehabilitation & Development
- Subjects
Cervical range of motion ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prevalence ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Primary care ,cervical spine ,Non traumatic ,whiplash injury ,Whiplash ,medicine ,Humans ,Range of Motion, Articular ,RATING-SCALE ,VALIDITY ,clinical characteristics ,Normal range ,Whiplash Injuries ,Pain Measurement ,Neck pain ,ANXIETY STRESS SCALES ,Neck Pain ,business.industry ,Subgroups ,ICF LINKING RULES ,Pain free ,medicine.disease ,DEPRESSION ,DISABILITY INDEX ,MODEL ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,disability ,RELIABILITY ,Physical therapy ,HEALTH ,medicine.symptom ,business ,TASK-FORCE - Abstract
BackgroundEvidence is lacking to what extent patients with Whiplash-Associated Disorders (WAD), those with non-traumatic neck pain (NTNP), and pain-free individuals differ regarding type and severity of impairments, disability, and psychological factors.Objective To compare clinical characteristics between patients with WAD, with NTNP, and pain-free individuals in primary care physiotherapy. Additionally, differences between patient groups for both acute and chronic symptoms were assessed.MethodA cross-sectional study was conducted including 168 patients with WAD, 336 matched patients with NTNP, and 336 pain-free individuals. Differences and prevalence rates were calculated for pain intensity, pain distribution, cervical range of motion, neck flexor muscle endurance, self-reported disability, and psychological factors.Results Patients with WAD had higher pain intensity (median 6/10 vs. 5/10 p83%) scored in the normal range. No significant differences between the patient groups were observed (p>.16). Both patient groups scored significantly worse than pain-free individuals on all characteristics. Patients with WAD and NTNP experienced different types of activity limitations and participation restrictions.ConclusionWAD is a more severe condition than NTNP and should be considered a separate subgroup. A different approach in clinical practice and research is required for WAD and NTNP.
- Published
- 2022