Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2712452 | PM&R | 2013 | 7 Pages |
ObjectiveTo examine whether functional performance upon hospital discharge is influenced by pain in the region of the hip fracture or related to the fracture type.DesignProspective observational study.SettingA 20-bed orthopedic hip fracture unit.PatientsFifty-five cognitively intact patients (20 men and 35 women; ages 75.8 ± 10 years), 33 with a cervical hip fracture and 22 with an intertrochanteric hip fracture, all of whom were allowed to bear full weight after surgery.MethodsAll patients were evaluated upon discharge from the hospital to their own homes at a mean of 10 ± 6 days after surgery.Main Outcome MeasurementsThe Timed Up & Go (TUG) test, supervised by a physical therapist, was used to evaluate functional performance, and a 5-point verbal ranking scale (0 = no pain to 4 = intolerable pain) was used to evaluate pain.ResultsPatients took an average of 22.7 ± 11.7 seconds to perform the TUG. No significant differences were observed in baseline characteristics or pain medication given for patients with a cervical versus an intertrochanteric fracture (P ≥ .22), but patients with an intertrochanteric fracture presented more often with moderate to severe pain during testing (P < .001), with associated poorer performances on the TUG test (29.4 ± 12.8 seconds versus 18.3 ± 8.5 seconds). Univariate analysis showed that TUG scores were associated with age, prefracture function evaluated by the New Mobility Score, fracture type, day of TUG performance, and pain intensity. Multivariate linear regression analyses (fracture type not included) showed that only greater age (B = 0.34), low prefracture function (B = 7.9), and experiencing moderate to severe pain (B = 8.7) were independently associated with having a poorer TUG score.ConclusionsHip fracture−related pain primarily compromises the functional performance of patients with an intertrochanteric hip fracture upon discharge from hospital. Physical therapists should be involved in new and optimized fracture-type stratified pain management strategies.