Home    中文  
 
  • Search
  • lucene Search
  • Citation
  • Fig/Tab
  • Adv Search
Just Accepted  |  Current Issue  |  Archive  |  Featured Articles  |  Most Read  |  Most Download  |  Most Cited

Chinese Journal of Joint Surgery(Electronic Edition) ›› 2022, Vol. 16 ›› Issue (04): 492-496. doi: 10.3877/cma.j.issn.1674-134X.2022.04.018

• Clinical Experiences • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Analysis of postoperative pain and its influencing factors in meniscus injury surgery

Min Zhang1, Xiaojie Liu1,()   

  1. 1. Department of bone and joint rehabilitation, Navy Qingdao Special Service Convalescent Center, Qingdao 266000, China
  • Received:2022-03-30 Online:2022-08-01 Published:2022-10-10
  • Contact: Xiaojie Liu

Abstract:

Objective

To analyze the status and influencing factors of postoperative pain residual in patients with knee meniscus injury.

Methods

A total of 150 patients with knee meniscus injury who were treated by surgery in Navy Qingdao Special Service Convalescent Center from November 2019 to March 2021 were included in the study. All the patients received regular rehabilitation training after operation. The patients were divided into the pain group (n=23) and the non-pain group (n=127) according to the visual analogue scale (VAS) score six months after the operation. The general data and the status of postoperative residual pain were collected and analyzed. the pain after rehabilitation training was analyzed by chi-square test and the influencing factors of residual pain was analyzed by multivariate logistic regression analysis.

Results

Six months after the operation, 23 of 150 patients with knee meniscus injury had pain after rehabilitation training, and the residual pain rate was 15.3%. There was no statistically significant difference in the preoperative VAS score between the two groups (t=0.630, P>0.05); the postoperative VAS scores were lower than the preoperative ones in the two groups (t=3.149, 20.409, both P<0.05); the postoperative VAS score was higher in the pain group than the non-pain group six months after the operation (t=9.961, P<0.05). Age>60 years old, body mass index(BMI)>24 kg/m2, articular cartilage injury, osteoarthritis pain, and synovectomy were the influencing factors for postoperative residual pain in the patients who accepted knee meniscus injury surgery[odds ratio (OR)=3.130, 2.164, 2.259, 3.881, 1.998; 95% confidence interval (CI): (1.537, 6.376), (1.420, 3.298), (1.135, 4.495), (1.376, 10.945), (1.054, 3.785), all P<0.05].

Conclusion

Some patients with knee meniscus injury still have residual pain after rehabilitation training, and the occurrence is related to factors such as age>60 years old, BMI>24 kg/m2, articular cartilage injury, osteoarthritis pain, and synovectomy.

Key words: Knee, Meniscus, Pain

京ICP 备07035254号-20
Copyright © Chinese Journal of Joint Surgery(Electronic Edition), All Rights Reserved.
Tel: 020-83189181,020-83062381 E-mail: cjojs1@126.com
Powered by Beijing Magtech Co. Ltd