4.3 Article

Gaining more insight into ankle pain in haemophilia: A study exploring pain, structural and functional evaluation of the ankle joint

Journal

HAEMOPHILIA
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 480-490

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/hae.14544

Keywords

biopsychosocial; diagnostic imaging; haemophilia; joint diseases; pain; pressure pain threshold

Categories

Funding

  1. EAHAD research grant
  2. University of Antwerp

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Ankle arthropathy is common among people with haemophilia and often leads to pain and disability. This study found that structural damage in the ankle is not related to pain severity in patients with haemophilia. Future research should consider somatosensory nervous system dysfunction as a contributing factor to painful ankle arthropathy.
Introduction Ankle arthropathy is highly prevalent among people with haemophilia (PwH), even with prophylaxis, and leads to pain and disability. Mechanisms and consequences of painful symptoms related to ankle arthropathy have not been extensively studied. Methods A consecutive sample of 30 adult PwH was included (60 ankles). Ankle structure was assessed with magnetic resonance imaging (IPSG-MRI) and ultrasound (HEAD-US). The HJHS 2.1 assessed function of ankles and knees. Physical functioning was assessed with the Timed Up and Go test, the 2-Minute Walking Test and activity limitations with the HAL questionnaire. Health-related quality of life was evaluated using the EQ-5D-5L questionnaire. Overall pain severity was examined using the Brief Pain Inventory questionnaire and ankle pain intensity with a visual analogue scale. Pressure pain thresholds with an algometer assessed pain sensitivity. Spearman correlations were used to calculate interrelations between joint structure, function and pain. Results Twenty-five PwH (83%) reported >= 1 painful joint, with 67% reporting the ankle as most painful joint. MRI-confirmed abnormalities were seen in 76% of talocrural and 55% of subtalar joints. HEAD-US abnormalities were seen in 93% of the ankles. A large variation was seen in pain sensitivity at the ankle. While moderate to high correlations were observed between ankle structure and HJHS, no meaningful correlations were found between MRI-scores and pain intensity or sensitivity. Conclusions Structural joint damage is present in many ankles but is not related to pain in PwH. Further studies should consider somatosensory nervous system dysfunction in PwH as contributing factor to painful ankle arthropathy.

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