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Prevalence of weakness and factors mediating discrepancy between reported and observed leg weakness in people with sciatica. | LitMetric

Prevalence of weakness and factors mediating discrepancy between reported and observed leg weakness in people with sciatica.

Eur Spine J

Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, The University of Oxford, West Wing Level 6, Oxford, OX3 9DU, UK.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study looked at people with sciatica to see how many reported leg weakness and how many actually showed weakness when checked by doctors.
  • Most of the patients (85%) said they had weakness, but only 34% showed it when tested.
  • The difference in what people reported and what doctors observed might be influenced by how bad their leg pain was and their age.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To establish the prevalence and agreement between reported and observed leg weakness in people with sciatica. To establish which factors mediate any identified difference between reported and observed leg weakness in people with sciatica.

Methods: 68 people with a clinical diagnosis of sciatica, records from spinal service, secondary care NHS Hospital, England, UK reviewed. Primary outcome measures were the sciatica bothersome index for reported leg weakness and the Medical Research Council scale for observed weakness. Agreement was established with Cohen's Kappa and intraclass correlation coefficient. Potential factors that may mediate a difference between reported and observed weakness included leg pain, sciatica bothersome index sensory subscale, age, hospital anxiety and depression subscale for anxiety.

Results: 85% of patients reported weakness but only 34% had observed weakness. Cohen's Kappa (0.066, 95% CI - 0.53, 0.186; p = 0.317)] and ICC 0.213 (95% CI - 0.26, 0.428, p = 0.040) both showed poor agreement between reported and observed weakness. The difference between reported and observed measures of weakness was mediated by the severity of leg pain (b = 0.281, p = 0.024) and age (b = 0.253, p = 0.042).

Conclusion: There is a high prevalence of reported leg weakness in people with sciatica, which is not reflected in observed clinical measures of weakness. Differences between reported and observed weakness may be driven by the severity of leg pain and age. Further work needs to establish whether other objective measures can detect patient reported weakness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7616658PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-024-08330-6DOI Listing

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