医学
生物心理社会模型
心理干预
物理疗法
系统回顾
模式
骨关节炎
多学科方法
替代医学
梅德林
护理部
精神科
病理
法学
社会学
社会科学
政治学
作者
Rinie Geenen,C.L. Overman,Robin Christensen,Pernilla Åsenlöf,Susana Capela,Karen L Huisinga,Mai Elin Husebø,Albère Köke,Zoë Paskins,I. Pitsillidou,Carine Savel,Judith Austin,Afton L. Hassett,G Severijns,Michaela Stoffer,Johan W.S. Vlaeyen,César Fernández‐de‐las‐Peñas,Sarah Ryan,Stefan Bergman
标识
DOI:10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212662
摘要
Pain is the predominant symptom for people with inflammatory arthritis (IA) and osteoarthritis (OA) mandating the development of evidence-based recommendations for the health professional's approach to pain management. A multidisciplinary task force including professionals and patient representatives conducted a systematic literature review of systematic reviews to evaluate evidence regarding effects on pain of multiple treatment modalities. Overarching principles and recommendations regarding assessment and pain treatment were specified on the basis of reviewed evidence and expert opinion. From 2914 review studies initially identified, 186 met inclusion criteria. The task force emphasised the importance for the health professional to adopt a patient-centred framework within a biopsychosocial perspective, to have sufficient knowledge of IA and OA pathogenesis, and to be able to differentiate localised and generalised pain. Treatment is guided by scientific evidence and the assessment of patient needs, preferences and priorities; pain characteristics; previous and ongoing pain treatments; inflammation and joint damage; and psychological and other pain-related factors. Pain treatment options typically include education complemented by physical activity and exercise, orthotics, psychological and social interventions, sleep hygiene education, weight management, pharmacological and joint-specific treatment options, or interdisciplinary pain management. Effects on pain were most uniformly positive for physical activity and exercise interventions, and for psychological interventions. Effects on pain for educational interventions, orthotics, weight management and multidisciplinary treatment were shown for particular disease groups. Underpinned by available systematic reviews and meta-analyses, these recommendations enable health professionals to provide knowledgeable pain-management support for people with IA and OA.
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