Physical and psychological factors maintain long-term predictive capacity post-whiplash injury
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 122 (1), 102-108
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pain.2006.01.014
Abstract
Higher initial levels of pain and disability, older age, cold hyperalgesia, impaired sympathetic vasoconstriction and moderate post-traumatic stress symptoms have been shown to be associated with poor outcome 6 months following whiplash injury. This study prospectively investigated the predictive capacity of these variables at a long-term follow-up. Sixty-five of an initial cohort of 76 acutely injured whiplash participants were followed to 2-3 years post-accident. Motor function (ROM; kinaesthetic sense; activity of the superficial neck flexors (EMG) during cranio-cervical flexion), quantitative sensory testing (pressure, thermal pain thresholds and brachial plexus provocation test), sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses and psychological distress (GHQ-28, TSK and IES) were measured. The outcome measure was Neck Disability Index (NDI) scores. Participants with ongoing moderate/severe symptoms at 2-3 years continued to manifest decreased ROM, increased EMG during cranio-cervical flexion, sensory hypersensitivity and elevated levels of psychological distress when compared to recovered participants and those with milder symptoms. The latter two groups showed only persistent deficits in cervical muscle recruitment patterns. Higher initial NDI scores (OR 1.00-1.1), older age (OR 1.00-1.13), cold hyperalgesia (OR 1.1-1.13) and post-traumatic stress symptoms (OR 1.03-1.2) remained significant predictors of poor outcome at long-term follow-up (r2=0.56). The robustness of these physical and psychological factors suggests that their assessment in the acute stage following whiplash injury will be important.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced cold pressor pain tolerance in non‐recovered whiplash patients: a 1‐year prospective studyEuropean journal of pain, 2005
- Impairment in the cervical flexors: a comparison of whiplash and insidious onset neck pain patientsManual Therapy, 2004
- Prognostic factors of whiplash-associated disorders: a systematic review of prospective cohort studiesPain, 2003
- A Systematic Review of the Prognosis of Acute Whiplash and a New Conceptual Framework to Synthesize the LiteratureSpine, 2001
- Handicap after acute whiplash injuryNeurology, 2001
- Long-Term Effects of Specific Stabilizing Exercises for First-Episode Low Back PainSpine, 2001
- Effect of Eliminating Compensation for Pain and Suffering on the Outcome of Insurance Claims for Whiplash InjuryNew England Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Long-Term Outcome after Whiplash Injury: A 2-Year Follow-Up Considering Features of Injury Mechanism and Somatic, Radiologic, and Psychosocial FindingsMedicine, 1995
- Whiplash injuryPain, 1994
- Impact of Event Scale: A Measure of Subjective StressPsychosomatic Medicine, 1979