Symptoms of depression and catastrophic thinking attenuate the relationship of pain intensity and magnitude of incapability with fracture severity

Aresh Al Salman, Romil Shah, Jacob E. Thomas, David Ring*, Tom J. Crijns, Stephen Gwilym, Prakash Jayakumar

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    14 Citations (Scopus)
    132 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Objective: The relative association of pain intensity and magnitude of incapability with pathophysiology, accounting for psychological factors, is incompletely understood. Using moderation analysis, we assessed the association of pain intensity and magnitude of incapability (dependent variables) with fracture severity (independent variable) and the influence of symptoms of depression and catastrophic thinking (moderators) at early and later stages of recovery.

    Methods: A cohort of 731 patients recovering from a shoulder, elbow, or wrist fracture, completed self-reported measures of pain intensity, upper extremity capability, symptoms of depression, and catastrophic thinking between 2 and 4 weeks after injury and again between 6 and 9 months after injury. Fracture severity was rated by clinicians, and we used multivariable regression analysis to examine interaction effects of fracture severity, depression, catastrophic thinking, pain intensity, and magnitude of incapability at early and later stages of recovery.

    Results: Symptoms of depression and catastrophic thinking attenuate the relationship between pain intensity and fracture severity at earlier and later stages of recovery. Symptoms of depression and catastrophic thinking also attenuate the relationship between the magnitude of incapability and fracture severity, but only at early stages of recovery.

    Conclusion: The relative divergence of pain intensity and magnitude of incapability from the level of fracture severity due to the moderating effects of unhelpful thinking and distress, signals a benefit to anticipating mental health opportunities during recovery after fracture. Fracture management can incorporate measures of unhelpful thinking and symptoms of distress to better address these opportunities and ensure comprehensive optimization of recovery.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number110915
    Number of pages7
    JournalJournal of Psychosomatic Research
    Volume158
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jul-2022

    Keywords

    • Patient reported outcome measures
    • Mental health
    • Biopsychosocial
    • Upper extremity fractures
    • Biological vs mental health
    • PATIENT-REPORTED OUTCOMES
    • PHYSICAL FUNCTION
    • HEALTH-STATUS
    • ITEM BANK
    • PREDICTORS
    • DISABILITY
    • PREVALENCE
    • THUMB
    • OSTEOARTHRITIS
    • RECOVERY

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