Adaptation to Early Knee Osteoarthritis: The Role of Risk, Resilience, and Disease Severity on Pain and Physical Functioning

Adult Male Pain Threshold Depressive Disorder Self-Assessment Chi-Square Distribution Knee Joint Middle Aged Models, Psychological Osteoarthritis, Knee Risk Assessment Severity of Illness Index Self Efficacy Radiography Affect 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Cost of Illness Adaptation, Psychological Humans Female Factor Analysis, Statistical
DOI: 10.1007/s12160-008-9048-5 Publication Date: 2008-08-20T15:58:53Z
ABSTRACT
Radiographic joint changes are used to diagnose osteoarthritis; however, they alone do not adequately predict who experiences symptoms.To examine psychological risk and resilience factors in combination with an objective indicator of disease severity (knee X-rays) to determine what factors best account for pain and physical functioning in an early knee osteoarthritis (KOA) population.Structural equation modeling was used to analyze data from 275 men and women with early KOA.Structural equation modeling yielded a fair to good fit of the data, suggesting that both risk and resilience were important in predicting pain and physical functioning over and above disease severity in the expected directions. Resilience's effect on pain was mediated through self-efficacy, suggesting that higher self-efficacy was linked to lower pain and better physical functioning.Results provide an integrative model of adjustment to early KOA and may be important to the prevention of disability in this population.
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