Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery

Chronic pain is a significant public health problem. A large portion of those with chronic pain have had their acute postsurgical pain transition into a chronic postsurgical pain state. The mechanisms contributing to pediatric persistent postsurgical pain is not well understood; however, there is em...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cadiz, Emilia Maria C.
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14681
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-14681
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-146812019-01-08T15:36:42Z Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery Cadiz, Emilia Maria C. Clinical psychology Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis Chronic pain Pain outcomes Pediatric postsurgical pain Psychosocial outcomes Spinal fusion surgery Chronic pain is a significant public health problem. A large portion of those with chronic pain have had their acute postsurgical pain transition into a chronic postsurgical pain state. The mechanisms contributing to pediatric persistent postsurgical pain is not well understood; however, there is empirical support in the adult literature to suggest that psychosocial factors play a significant role in the maintenance and exacerbation of post-surgical pain. Recent research by our group found high pain prevalence rates up to 5-years post-surgery among children undergoing spinal fusion surgery, particularly among those reporting poor pre-surgical mental health. The current study aims to extend this research by exploring psycho-social functioning and pain among children (10-21 years) who underwent major orthopedic surgery and their parents (n=21 dyads; data collection is ongoing). Measures administered 1-3 years post-surgery included pain ratings, the Bath Adolescent Pain Questionnaire (Child; Parental Impact), Fear of Pain Questionnaire, Functional Disability Inventory, and the Adult Responses to Child Symptoms. Preliminary results found that 52% of patients reported pain in the moderate-severe range in the past 6 months. Additionally, increased child pain was associated with greater child-reported functional disability (p<.01), pain-specific anxiety (p<.01), and fear of pain (p<.05), as well as worse overall emotional functioning (p<.05). Parents of children with increased pain reported worse parental strain (e.g., "found my relationship with my child difficult," p<.05). Identifying correlates of poor long-term outcomes in children with postsurgical pain may prevent the development of chronic pain into adulthood. With recent economic costs of adult chronic pain estimated to be between $560-$635 billion per year research on the role of persistent pain in children is of upmost importance in order to positively impact pre-surgical preparation, postsurgical care, and in potentially preventing disabling pain into adulthood for a population at considerable risk. This investigation was supported by the Boston Children's Hospital Career Development Fellowship Award (CS). 2016-03-02T16:23:24Z 2016-03-02T16:23:24Z 2014 2016-01-22T18:57:29Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14681 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical psychology
Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis
Chronic pain
Pain outcomes
Pediatric postsurgical pain
Psychosocial outcomes
Spinal fusion surgery
spellingShingle Clinical psychology
Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis
Chronic pain
Pain outcomes
Pediatric postsurgical pain
Psychosocial outcomes
Spinal fusion surgery
Cadiz, Emilia Maria C.
Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
description Chronic pain is a significant public health problem. A large portion of those with chronic pain have had their acute postsurgical pain transition into a chronic postsurgical pain state. The mechanisms contributing to pediatric persistent postsurgical pain is not well understood; however, there is empirical support in the adult literature to suggest that psychosocial factors play a significant role in the maintenance and exacerbation of post-surgical pain. Recent research by our group found high pain prevalence rates up to 5-years post-surgery among children undergoing spinal fusion surgery, particularly among those reporting poor pre-surgical mental health. The current study aims to extend this research by exploring psycho-social functioning and pain among children (10-21 years) who underwent major orthopedic surgery and their parents (n=21 dyads; data collection is ongoing). Measures administered 1-3 years post-surgery included pain ratings, the Bath Adolescent Pain Questionnaire (Child; Parental Impact), Fear of Pain Questionnaire, Functional Disability Inventory, and the Adult Responses to Child Symptoms. Preliminary results found that 52% of patients reported pain in the moderate-severe range in the past 6 months. Additionally, increased child pain was associated with greater child-reported functional disability (p<.01), pain-specific anxiety (p<.01), and fear of pain (p<.05), as well as worse overall emotional functioning (p<.05). Parents of children with increased pain reported worse parental strain (e.g., "found my relationship with my child difficult," p<.05). Identifying correlates of poor long-term outcomes in children with postsurgical pain may prevent the development of chronic pain into adulthood. With recent economic costs of adult chronic pain estimated to be between $560-$635 billion per year research on the role of persistent pain in children is of upmost importance in order to positively impact pre-surgical preparation, postsurgical care, and in potentially preventing disabling pain into adulthood for a population at considerable risk. This investigation was supported by the Boston Children's Hospital Career Development Fellowship Award (CS).
author Cadiz, Emilia Maria C.
author_facet Cadiz, Emilia Maria C.
author_sort Cadiz, Emilia Maria C.
title Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
title_short Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
title_full Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
title_fullStr Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
title_full_unstemmed Long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
title_sort long-term pain and psychosocial outcomes in children following major orthopedic surgery
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14681
work_keys_str_mv AT cadizemiliamariac longtermpainandpsychosocialoutcomesinchildrenfollowingmajororthopedicsurgery
_version_ 1718811072106856448