Use of verbal pain measurement in the detection of hidden psychological morbidity among low back pain patients with objective organic findings |
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Authors: | Frank Leavitt |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology and Social Sciences , Rush Medical College , 1750 West Harrison Street, Chicago, Illinois, 60612, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract Patients with positive physical findings to explain low back pain arc believed lo belong to two organic subgroups. One group has organic disease alone: in the other, organic disease is accompanied by psychological disturbance. Separation of patients with medical findings into groups with varying levels of psychological disturbance is difficult, because emotional disturbance is often hidden. In this study, the pain report of 124 patients with organic findings alone, and 50 patients with organic and psychological findings was examined to determine whether pain measurement could he used to identify accurately patients belonging 10 the two groups. the pain groups differed in the use of 43 pain words from the Low Back Pain Symptom Check List. Using a set of weights derived From discriminant analysis. the 33 pain words predicted 99.2% of the patients with organic disease alone and 86.0% of the patients with organic disease and psychological disturbance. The results were replicated in a new sample of 140 patients. Cross-validation shrinkage in accuracy was 8.3%. The results of the two studies suggest that pain measurement may he a useful clinical indicator of psychological disturbance in patients with organic findings. |
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Keywords: | Back pain psychologic screening pain measurement organic-functional classification Low Back Pain Symptom Check List |
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