Understanding Kinesiophobia: Predictors and Influence on Early Functional Outcomes in Patients with Total Knee Arthroplasty

Author:

Aleksić Milica12ORCID,Selaković Ivan12ORCID,Tomanović Vujadinović Sanja12,Kadija Marko23ORCID,Milovanović Darko23ORCID,Meissner Winfried4ORCID,Zaslansky Ruth4ORCID,Srećković Svetlana235ORCID,Dubljanin-Raspopović Emilija12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University Clinical Center Serbia, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

2. Faculty of Medicine, University of Belgrade, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

3. Clinic for Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology, Clinical Center Serbia, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

4. Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Jena University Hospital, Friedrich Schiller University, 07737 Jena, Germany

5. Center for Anesthesiology and Resuscitation, University Clinical Center of Serbia, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

This observational study aimed to identify predictors of kinesiophobia and examine its correlation with early functional outcomes in TKA recipients. On the first and fifth postoperative days (POD1 and POD5), we evaluated pain using the International Pain Outcomes Questionnaire (IPO-Q) and created multidimensional pain composite scores (PCSs). The Total Pain Composite Score (PCStotal) assesses the overall impact of pain, taking into account outcomes of pain intensity, pain-related interference with function, and emotions and side effects. Functional status on POD 5 was determined by the Barthel index, 6 min walking test, and knee range of motion. Kinesiophobia was assessed on POD5 using the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK). Among 75 TKA patients, 27% exhibited kinesiophobia. The final regression model highlighted PCStotal on POD5 (OR = 6.2, CI = 1.9–19.9), PCStotal (OR = 2.1, CI = 1.2–3.8) on POD1, and the intensity of chronic pain before surgery (OR = 1.4, CI = 1.1–2.1) as significant kinesiophobia predictors. On POD5, those with kinesiophobia showed increased dependency, slower gait, and poorer knee extension recovery. This study emphasizes the need to identify and address kinesiophobia in TKA patients for better functional outcomes and recovery. Additionally, it is vital to assess different domains of pain, not just pain intensity, as it can lead to kinesiophobia development.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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