1979
DOI: 10.1016/0304-3959(79)90172-6
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Psycho-social factors in osteoarthritis of the hip

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Cited by 9 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…In those with osteoarthritis, the correlates of fatigue, often not associated strongly with osteoarthritis, were older age (p=0.02), sleep disturbances (p=0.03), depression (p=0.04), disability (p=0.04) and lower C-Reactive Protein (p=0.001). Taken, as a whole, these findings support the idea that depression has a direct effect not only on the interpretation of osteoarthritis pain as identified by Lunghi et al [70], but also on life quality and surgical outcomes of the osteoarthritis patient [71,72].…”
Section: Need For Interventions To Decrease Depressionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…In those with osteoarthritis, the correlates of fatigue, often not associated strongly with osteoarthritis, were older age (p=0.02), sleep disturbances (p=0.03), depression (p=0.04), disability (p=0.04) and lower C-Reactive Protein (p=0.001). Taken, as a whole, these findings support the idea that depression has a direct effect not only on the interpretation of osteoarthritis pain as identified by Lunghi et al [70], but also on life quality and surgical outcomes of the osteoarthritis patient [71,72].…”
Section: Need For Interventions To Decrease Depressionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Hypochondriasis declined with age, but the relationship with pain persisted even after adjustment for this confounder. "Negative affect" has been associated with pain and disability in OA hip (34) and knee (35). Hypochondriasis is strongly related to neuroticism, which has been associated with a wide range of symptom reporting (36).…”
Section: Personality and Knee Painmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High unpleasant life event scores have been related to disability in hip OA (34), and recent life stress (measured using the Social Readjustment Rating Scale) was found to be associated with higher pain severity in knee OA (33), although this effect disappeared after adjustment for age. There is some evidence that "daily hassles" (repetitive, chronic irritations, such as troubles with family life or work, excessive noise, frustrations with living conditions) are more related to health perceptions than major stress, and at least one report has linked these to knee pain severity in patients with knee OA (38).…”
Section: Life Stressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, individual differences in coping style may be important to explain patients' levels of adaptation in chronic disease. The few studies of psychologic differences among individual OA patients have found that higher levels of depression and anxiety were related to greater reported pain and FI (8,16,17).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%