Pain in Nursing Home Residents and Correlation with Neuropsychiatric Disorders

被引:0
|
作者
Walid, M. Sami [1 ]
Zaytseva, Nadezda [2 ]
机构
[1] Med Ctr Cent Georgia, Macon, GA 31201 USA
[2] Kuban State Med Univ, Krasnodar, Russia
关键词
Pain; neurodegenerative; psychiatric; nursing home; MAJOR DEPRESSION; PERCEPTION;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Background: Pain is a common problem in older age and strongly interacts with neuropsychiatric disorders. In this paper we studied the prevalence of pain and the connection between pain and neuropsychiatric comorbidities among older nursing home residents. Objective: To determine if data provided in 2004 National Nursing Home Sturvey supports connection between pain and neuropsychiatric comorbidities among older nursing home residents. Setting: Medical university. Design: Retrospective study of published reports. Methods: We used the results of the 2004 National Nursing Home Survey (NNHS) to determine the rates and correlations of pain parameters with the main neurodegenerative and psychiatric diagnoses. in residents over 65 years of age including Alzheimer's and Picks dementia, schizophrenia, depression, bipolar disease, anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Results: Pain was reported by 22% of residents over 65 years of age. Patients with anxiety or depression had the highest prevalence of pain, 29.4% and 24.4%, respectively. Patients with dementia had the lowest rate of reported pain, 14.5%. All neurodegenerative and psychiatric diagnoses had significant correlations (P = 0.000) with pain rate, however, only anxiety (r = 0.056) and depression (r=0.025) positively correlated with the presence of pain, There were clear differences in the highest levels of reported pain in different neurodegenerative and psychiatric groups. We created the Disease-Specific Pain Intensity Scale (DSPI Scale) which can be calculated for each diagnostic entity. The DSPI was highest in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (721) and lowest in patients with bipolar disease (358). The average value of this scale in nursing home residents who reported pain in the last 7 days was 488. Limitations: The overwhelming majority of patients had chronic somatic diseases that were not included in the analysis and could skew the results. In addition, pain perception could be affected by prescribed medications which were not taken into consideration. Moreover, neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders could interact among each other and overlapped cases were not regarded in our research. Finally, the new instrument created for evaluating the spectrum of highest pain intensities in a group of patients with a specific diagnosis requires validation. It is a unidimentional scale that does not incorporate the length of time a person has experienced pain, an important parameter in pain chronicity. Conclusion: it is important when assessing pain to consider the patient's neuropsychiatric status and especially communication abilities. The information above helps understand the variances in pain parameters in neuropsychiatric patients and may ultimately lead to better pain management in these difficult patients.
引用
收藏
页码:877 / 880
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impact of Pain and Neuropsychiatric Symptoms on Activities in Nursing Home Residents (COSMOS Trial)
    van de Beek, Sifra H.
    Erdal, Ane
    Husebo, Bettina S.
    Vislapuu, Maarja
    Achterberg, Wilco P.
    Caljouw, Monique A. A.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION, 2024, 25 (05) : 847 - 852.e3
  • [2] Severity of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in Nursing Home Residents
    Helvik, Anne-Sofie
    Engedal, Knut
    Wu, Bei
    Benth, Jurate Saltyte
    Corazzini, Kirsten
    Roen, Irene
    Selbaek, Geir
    DEMENTIA AND GERIATRIC COGNITIVE DISORDERS EXTRA, 2016, 6 (01): : 28 - 42
  • [3] Assessing Nursing Home Residents' Pain
    Worth, Tammy
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NURSING, 2009, 109 (12) : 22 - 22
  • [4] Assessment of nursing home residents' pain
    Engle, VF
    Graney, MJ
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2000, 48 (08) : S119 - S119
  • [5] Pain trajectories of nursing home residents
    Cole, Connie S. S.
    Carpenter, Janet S. S.
    Blackburn, Justin
    Chen, Chen X. X.
    Jones, Bobby L. L.
    Hickman, Susan E. E.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2023, 71 (04) : 1188 - 1197
  • [6] Persistent pain in nursing home residents
    Teno, JM
    Weitzen, S
    Wetle, T
    Mor, V
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2001, 285 (16): : 2081 - 2081
  • [7] Pain and Persistent Pain in Nursing Home Residents in Norway
    Landmark, Bjorg T.
    Gran, Siv Venke
    Kim, Hesook Suzie
    RESEARCH IN GERONTOLOGICAL NURSING, 2013, 6 (01) : 47 - 56
  • [8] The use of the neuropsychiatric inventory in nursing home residents -: Characterization and measurement
    Wood, S
    Cummings, JL
    Hsu, MA
    Barclay, T
    Wheatley, MV
    Yarema, KT
    Schnelle, JF
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, 2000, 8 (01): : 75 - 83
  • [9] THE EYE DISORDERS OF RESIDENTS OF A NURSING-HOME
    MARX, MS
    WERNER, P
    FELDMAN, R
    COHENMANSFIELD, J
    JOURNAL OF VISUAL IMPAIRMENT & BLINDNESS, 1994, 88 (05) : 462 - 468
  • [10] Psychiatric disorders in Nigerian nursing home residents
    Baiyewu, O
    Adeyemi, JD
    Ogunniyi, A
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, 1997, 12 (12) : 1146 - 1150