Objective To investigate the influence of arthritis in individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability questionnaires in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods 206 patients were included who had the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (C-HAQ) and the Juvenile Arthritis Functionality Scale (JAFS) completed simultaneoulsy by a parent and received a detailed joint assessment. In each patient, joint involvement (defined as presence of swelling, pain on motion/tenderness and/or restricted motion) was classified in 3 topographic patterns: Pattern 1 (hip, knee, ankle, subtalar, foot joints): Pattern 2 (wrist and hand joints): Pattern 3 (elbow, shoulder, cervical spine and temporomandibular joints). Frequency of reported disability in each instrument subdimension was evaluated for each joint pattern, present either isolatedly or in mixed form. Results Among patients with Pattern 1, the JAFS revealed the greatest ability to capture and discriminate functional limitation, whereas impairment in the C-HAQ was more diluted across several subdimensions. Both C-HAQ and JAFS appeared to be less reliable in detecting functional impairment in the hand and wrist (Pattern 2) than in other body areas. Overall, the JAFS revealed a superior ability to discriminate the relative functional impact of impairment in individual joint groups among patients with mixed joint patterns. Conclusion In children with JIA, a functional measure focused to assess the function of individual joint groups (the JAFS) may detect with greater precision the functional impact of arthritis in specific body areas than does a standard questionnaire based on the assessment of activities of daily living (the C-HAQ). RI Pistorio, Angela/D-1375-2009

ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of arthritis in individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability questionnaires in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).Methods206 patients were included who had the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (C-HAQ) and the Juvenile Arthritis Functionality Scale (JAFS) completed simultaneoulsy by a parent and received a detailed joint assessment. In each patient, joint involvement (defined as presence of swelling, pain on motion/tenderness and/or restricted motion) was classified in 3 topographic patterns: Pattern 1 (hip, knee, ankle, subtalar, foot joints): Pattern 2 (wrist and hand joints): Pattern 3 (elbow, shoulder, cervical spine and temporomandibular joints). Frequency of reported disability in each instrument subdimension was evaluated for each joint pattern, present either isolatedly or in mixed form.ResultsAmong patients with Pattern 1, the JAFS revealed the greatest ability to capture and discriminate functional...

Meiorin, S., Filocamo, G., Pistorio, A., Magni-Manzoni, S., Sztajnbok, F., Cespedes-Cruz, A., et al. (2009). Impact of involvement of individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability scales in juvenile idiopathic arthritis. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 27(3), 527-533.

Impact of involvement of individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability scales in juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Ruperto N;
2009

Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of arthritis in individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability questionnaires in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).Methods206 patients were included who had the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (C-HAQ) and the Juvenile Arthritis Functionality Scale (JAFS) completed simultaneoulsy by a parent and received a detailed joint assessment. In each patient, joint involvement (defined as presence of swelling, pain on motion/tenderness and/or restricted motion) was classified in 3 topographic patterns: Pattern 1 (hip, knee, ankle, subtalar, foot joints): Pattern 2 (wrist and hand joints): Pattern 3 (elbow, shoulder, cervical spine and temporomandibular joints). Frequency of reported disability in each instrument subdimension was evaluated for each joint pattern, present either isolatedly or in mixed form.ResultsAmong patients with Pattern 1, the JAFS revealed the greatest ability to capture and discriminate functional...
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Disability; Functional assessment; Health outcomes; Juvenile idiopathic arthritis;
juvenile idiopathic arthritis; functional assessment; disability; health outcomes
English
2009
27
3
527
533
reserved
Meiorin, S., Filocamo, G., Pistorio, A., Magni-Manzoni, S., Sztajnbok, F., Cespedes-Cruz, A., et al. (2009). Impact of involvement of individual joint groups on subdimensions of functional ability scales in juvenile idiopathic arthritis. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RHEUMATOLOGY, 27(3), 527-533.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/557861
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