Predictive Factors for Developing Chronic Pain After Total Knee Arthroplasty

The Journal of Arthroplasty
David H KimAsokumar Buvanendran

Abstract

Total knee arthroplasty offers substantial improvements for patients as measured by functional status and quality of life; however, 8% to 34% of patients experience chronic postsurgical pain following surgery (CPSP). In addition to disruption in daily activities of life caused by the pain itself, CPSP has been associated with an overall reduction in quality of life following surgery. Risk factors for CPSP can be broadly defined as potentially modifiable or unlikely modifiable. Unlikely modifiable risks include gender, age, medical comorbidities, and socioeconomic status. Potentially modifiable risks include perioperative pain, physical function, psychological state, surgical factors, and possibly genomics. Understanding risks and the magnitude of their effect on outcomes such as CPSP is desirable because interventions designed to affect these factors may be able to dramatically improve outcomes.

Citations

Jun 10, 2020·Pain Practice : the Official Journal of World Institute of Pain·Jonathan M HagedornRobert T Trousdale
Sep 9, 2019·Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy : Official Journal of the ESSKA·Davide PrevitaliChristian Candrian
Aug 4, 2019·Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine·Andrés Zorrilla-VacaMichael Conrad Grant
Aug 28, 2020·Physical Therapy Research·Tatsu FujiuraHidetaka Wakabayashi
Dec 2, 2020·European Journal of Pain : EJP·Maren F LindbergAnners Lerdal
Mar 20, 2021·Wiener klinische Wochenschrift·Alexander BumbergerWenzel Waldstein
Jul 31, 2021·Revista española de anestesiología y reanimación·T CuñatX Sala-Blanch
Aug 5, 2021·Southern Medical Journal·Lauren A BeaupreC Allyson Jones
Oct 12, 2021·Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine·Sai-Sai HuangShi-Ren Shen
Nov 11, 2021·The Clinical Journal of Pain·Diab Fuad HettaMontaser A Fattah Mohammad

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