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Pain is the most common secondary condition in patients with CP and the most important factor associated with reduced health-related quality of life. Pain in adolescents with CP is reported approximately 50-75%. Despite being a condition that can be seen with such a high prevalence, it is difficult for researchers and clinicians to capture this subjective perception in CP, as the individual may be a small child, may be cognitively impaired, visually impaired, or have communication difficulties. For these reasons, unrecognized pain can have negative effects on quality of life and participation in daily living activities, both as a result of limited mobility resulting from pain itself and fear-driven avoidance of specific activities. Self-report of pain is appropriate for individuals with CP without cognitive impairment. However, depending on the severity of communication impairment, self-report may be limited or even impossible to obtain in individuals with severe CP. In the case of individuals with CP, self-report supplemented with parent report, when possible, is the recommended strategy.
The aims of this study: (i) to explore what is known about the prevalence, location, intensity and the effect of pain on daily lives of adolescents with CP; (ii) to demonstrate the relation between pain, clinical and sociodemographic characteristics; (iii) to compare self-reports of pain with mothers'reports of their child's pain.
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The investigators will record demographical data including age, gender, height (cm), weight (kg), body mass index (BMI), school type, type of family (core or combined family) of the children and socioeconomic status of the family, mothers' age and educational level. The subtypes of CP will be classified, using the Swedish classification, into spastic (tetraplegia, diplegia and hemiplegia), ataxic, dyskinetic and mixed. Severity of CP will be determined based on the Gross Motor Functional Classification System. It will be questioned in which situations the pain occurred in the previous week (at rest from spasms, at rest from splints, on feeding, on moving, on dressing, at night, on exercise, on other treatments, on botulinum toxin application) and record as yes/no. The pain questionnaire described by Doralp et al (14) will be used both for the self-evaluation of adolescents with CP' pain and for mothers to evaluate their children's pain. Participants will be asked to respond to the initial question "Over the past month, have you experienced physical pain?" (yes or no). Those responding "yes" will be asked "Please indicate how severe your pain was over the past month, on average," with response options from 1 (very little pain) to 10 (extremely painful). They will be asked to indicate "How much the pain gets in the way of your daily activities over the past month" from a low of 1 (does not get in the way at all) to 10 (unable to carry out activities because of the pain). Finally, they will be asked to indicate the body regions in which they experienced pain.
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Inclusion Criteria for patients:
Exclusion Criteria for patients:
Inclusion Criteria for their mothers:
Exclusion Criteria for their mothers:
75 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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