Physicians should consider treating pain more aggressively in children with arthritis, in order to preserve function in school and social domains, as well as physical function. Moreover, optimal pain management in children with arthritis should include therapeutic regimens addressing anxiety as well as standard pharmacologic interventions.
Brief training in coping skills followed by minimal therapist contact may lead to a range of benefits when children practice with their skills on a consistent basis.
Survivors of pediatric BT showed significant deficits in social functioning as compared to an illness comparison group. Errors in facial expression recognition represent another method for evaluating deficits that contribute to social outcomes.
Objective. To analyze patterns of stress, mood, disease symptoms, and activity reduction in children with polyarticular arthritis, using a prospective daily diary method.Methods. For a 2-month period, 51 children with polyarticular arthritis (mean age 12.4 years, 65% female) completed daily diaries that included measures of symptoms of pain, stiffness, and fatigue, as well as stress, mood, and activity reduction. Functional status and disease activity were assessed at the initial and followup evaluations with use of the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire, physician global assessment, joint count, and laboratory testing.Results. Children reported having pain, stiffness, and fatigue on >70% of days, with significant variability in symptom levels. Results revealed significant sameday relationships between stress, mood, and disease symptoms, after controlling for covariates. Specifically, daily fluctuations in both stress and mood were predictive of increased pain, stiffness, and fatigue. Increases in daily stress, mood, and disease symptoms were also significantly related to decreased participation in social activities on a day-to-day basis. Only mood and stiffness were predictors of a cutback in school attendance.Conclusion. Stress and mood are important predictors of daily disease symptoms in children with polyarticular arthritis. Moreover, daily fluctuations in stress, mood, and disease symptoms are predictive of aspects of daily function, including participation in school and social activities. Thus, health care providers should solicit daily symptom reports when making decisions regarding clinical management. Nonpharmacologic interventions such as cognitive-behavioral therapy and stress management may be useful adjuvant therapy when treating the disease symptoms of children with polyarticular arthritis.
Objective To use electronic diaries (e-diaries) to determine whether pain, stiffness, and fatigue continue to be common, disabling symptoms in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) despite the use of aggressive treatments in contemporary medical management. Methods Fifty-nine children with JIA (ages 8–18 years) provided ratings of pain, stiffness, and fatigue intensity and functional limitations using a smartphone e-diary 3 times each day for 1 month. Medication information was collected via parent report and checked for accuracy by chart review. Descriptive analyses were conducted to determine typical symptom intensity, frequency, and variability. Multilevel modeling was used to analyze associations between symptoms and functional outcomes and between medication use and symptom intensity. Results Children reported moments of pain in 66% of e-diary entries. No children were entirely pain-free across the reporting period. In 31% of all e-diary entries the visual analog scale score for pain was >40 (high pain intensity), with 86% of children reporting a high level of pain at least once during the study period. The mean ratings of pain, stiffness, and fatigue intensity were in the mild-to-moderate range. Medication class was not a reliable predictor of differences in symptom intensity, even though 79% of children were prescribed a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug and 47% were prescribed a biologic agent. Moments of higher pain intensity and higher stiffness intensity were each uniquely predictive of higher concurrent functional limitations. Conclusion Self-reported pain, stiffness, and fatigue continue to be common in children with JIA, despite contemporary advances in treatment strategies, including use of biologic agents. These findings are surprisingly consistent with previous results from research using daily paper diaries in the pre-biologics era. There remains a pressing and ongoing need to optimize pain and symptom management in JIA.
Health providers should assess parental beliefs and parenting practices in assessing the adjustment of children with chronic illness. Moreover, interventions aimed at enhancing child adjustment to chronic illness might best target parents as well as children.
ABSTRACT. Objectives. To examine the relationships of parental and family pain history on the pain experience of children with chronic rheumatic disease. The aims of the study were as follows: 1) to describe the pain history of parents and families of children with rheumatic disease, 2) to examine relationships between parental and family pain history and the pain report and physician-rated health status of children with chronic rheumatic disease, and 3) to determine whether child coping mediates the relationship between family pain history and the child's pain and physician-rated health status.Method. Parents of 100 children were recruited from a pediatric rheumatology clinic during routine visits. Parents completed questionnaires assessing parental pain history and family characteristics. Children in the study completed a series of questionnaires to assess pain and pain coping strategies, including the Coping Strategies Questionnaire and parts of the Pediatric Pain Questionnaire. A pediatric rheumatologist provided a global assessment of disease severity on a 100-mm visual analog scale as an index of child health status.Results. A high number of parents of children seen in a pediatric rheumatology clinic described a personal pain history. More than 90% of parents reported having at least 1 chronic pain condition, with an equal proportion reporting an episode of pain in the past month. The most commonly reported pain conditions were lower back pain, shoulder/neck pain, and migraine headache pain. On average, this group of parents reported a history of 3.5 chronic pain conditions (standard deviation: 2.3) and reported having sought treatment for 1.7 (standard deviation: 2.3) of these conditions. Additionally, 93% of all parents reported extended family members experiencing at least 1 chronic pain condition. Correlational analyses indicated that parents reporting higher levels of current pain and higher mean levels of pain during the past month were more likely to have children reporting higher levels of current pain (r ؍ 0.23 and r ؍ 0.27). In addition, parents who sought more treatment for their own pain were more likely to have children reporting higher levels of pain (r ؍ 0.22) and presenting with poorer health status (r ؍ 0.22). Similarly, parents reporting higher levels of pain-related interference with activity were more likely to have children reporting higher levels of current pain (r ؍ 0.23). Correlational analyses also indicated that children whose extended families reported a history of multiple pain conditions were more likely to report higher levels of current pain (r ؍ 0.24) and more pain locations (r ؍ 0.23). Finally, a series of mediational statistical models confirmed that child use of the pain coping strategy, catastrophizing, partially accounted for the relationship between several parent and family pain history variables and the child's own current pain ratings and physician global assessment. Specifically, child catastrophizing mediated the relationships between the total numbe...
The role of stress and mood in the onset and course of sickle cell disease (SCD) pain was examined using a daily diary design. Fifteen adults with SCD completed daily diaries about their pain, stress, mood, and health care and medication use for an average of 94 days. Multilevel random effects models indicated that stress was significantly and positively related to same-day pain ratings. Stress remained a significant predictor of pain after omitting stressors related to SCD. Mood also showed significant associations with same-day pain in the expected directions. In addition, stress and mood were associated with health care and medication use during painful episodes. Finally, painful episodes were preceded by increases in stress 2 days previously, suggesting that stress may play a role in the onset of SCD pain.
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