Background pain in persons with chronic leg ulcers: An exploratory study of symptom characteristics and management
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3026930Utgivelsesdato
2021Metadata
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Originalversjon
Leren, L., Eide, H., Johansen, E. A., Jelnes, R. & Ljoså, T. M. (2022). Background pain in persons with chronic leg ulcers: An exploratory study of symptom characteristics and management. International Wound Journal, 19(6), 1357-1369. https://doi.org/10.1111/iwj.13730Sammendrag
This exploratory descriptive study aimed to describe characteristics and management of background pain related to chronic leg ulcers. A total of 121 participants were recruited from two wound care clinics using a consecutive sampling method. Data were obtained through screening interview, clinical examination, and questionnaires. The mean average background pain intensity was 4.5 (SD 2.56) (CI 95% 4.0-5.0). Pain interfered mostly with general activity (mean 4.3), sleep (mean 4.1), and walking ability (mean 4.0) (0-10 NRS). The most frequently reported descriptors of background pain were ‘tender’, ‘stabbing’, ‘aching’, and ‘hot-burning’. Most of the participants stated that the pain was intermittent. Less than 60% had analgesics prescribed specifically for ulcer related pain, and the respondents reported that pain management provided a mean pain relief of 45.9% (SD 33.9, range 0-100). The findings indicate that ulcer related background pain is a significant problem that interferes with daily function, and that pain management in wound care is still inadequate.