5 research outputs found

    Outcome prediction for plantar heel pain

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    PhD thesisIntroduction: Plantar Heel pain (PHP) is a common, problematic disorder with unsatisfactory treatment outcomes. The physical impairments associated with PHP are commonly documented but there is insufficient data to develop multi-variable biopsychosocial models that explain presentation, differences to other conditions, severity or prognosis. In this thesis, I investigated the demographic characteristics and biopsychosocial factors in persons with PHP to develop a prediction model for recovery. Methods: There were four main parts to the thesis. A systematic review explored the prognostic factors for recovery or successful treatment of plantar heel pain. A feasibility study was performed to investigate the feasibility of data collection procedures and establish equivalence to usual procedures for the questionnaire battery. A case-control study was conducted to identify associated factors of PHP severity. Finally, a prospective cohort study was implemented to develop a prediction model for recovery of PHP. Results: There are limited biomedical factors which can be used to predict PHP outcome, with a notable absence of high quality prospective cohort studies that consider multiple variables including psychosocial or psychological factors. Questionnaire administration by our online method was valid and reliable. The case control study showed the factors associated with foot health severity were overall quality of life (QoL) (β=0.35; p<0.001), education level (β=−0.22; p=0.003), sex (β=−0.20; p=0.007), morning pain duration (β=−0.18; p=0.01) and disease duration (β=−0.15; p=0.04) in the context of a comprehensive model. The cohort study revealed the risk of still having PHP was 52.5% after 1 year. People who have better general foot health, a shorter symptom duration and have had an injection at any time have a higher chance of recovery. The model provided accurate prediction of the overall recovery (C-statistic 0.68; 95% CI 0.66 to 0.79) for PHP with acceptable discrimination and calibration. Conclusion: There are assumptions in the literature that prognostic factors for plantar heel pain recovery are mainly physical. My online questionnaire considering a wide range of biopsychosocial variables was valid for remote monitoring of patients for clinical and research purposes, including the cohort study. The developmental models showed severity and recovery are not just determined by physical features of the presentation. Patients presenting with PHP of long duration who score worse on the foot health of FHSQ have a poorer prognosis, irrespective of age, sex and other demographic variables. My results suggest that strategies aimed at preventing chronicity of more severe PHP may optimise prognosis

    Online questionnaire, clinical and biomechanical measurements for outcome prediction of plantar heel pain: feasibility for a cohort study

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    BACKGROUND: Plantar heel pain (PHP) accounts for 11-15% of foot symptoms requiring professional care in adults. Recovery is variable, with no robust prognostic guides for sufferers, clinicians or researchers. Therefore, we aimed to determine the validity, reliability and feasibility of questionnaire, clinical and biomechanical measures selected to generate a prognostic model in a subsequent cohort study. METHODS: Thirty-six people (19 females & 17 males; 20-63 years) were recruited with equal numbers in each of three groups: people with PHP (PwPHP), other foot pain (PwOP) and healthy (H) controls. Eighteen people performed a questionnaire battery twice in a randomised order to determine online and face-to-face agreement. The remaining 18 completed the online questionnaire once, plus clinical measurements including strength and range of motion, mid-foot mobility, palpation and ultrasound assessment of plantar fascia. Nine of the same people underwent biomechanical assessment in the form of a graded loaded challenge augmenting walking with added external weight and amended step length on two occasions. Outcome measures were (1) feasibility of the data collection procedure, measurement time and other feedback; (2) establishing equivalence to usual procedures for the questionnaire battery; known-group validity for clinical and imaging measures; and initial validation and reliability of biomechanical measures. RESULTS: There were no systematic differences between online and face-to-face administration of questionnaires (p-values all > .05) nor an administration order effect (d = - 0.31-0.25). Questionnaire reliability was good or excellent (ICC2,1_absolute)(ICC 0.86-0.99), except for two subscales. Full completion of the survey took 29 ± 14 min. Clinically, PwPHP had significantly less ankle-dorsiflexion and hip internal-rotation compared to healthy controls [mean (±SD) for PwPHP-PwOP-H = 14°(±6)-18°(±8)-28°(±10); 43°(±4)- 45°(±9)-57°(±12) respectively; p < .02 for both]. Plantar fascia thickness was significantly higher in PwPHP (3.6(0.4) mm vs 2.9(0.4) mm, p = .01) than the other groups. The graded loading challenge demonstrated progressively increasing ground reaction forces. CONCLUSION: Online questionnaire administration was valid therefore facilitating large cohort recruitment and being relevant to remote service evaluation and research. The physical and ultrasound examination revealed the expected differences between groups, while the graded loaded challenge progressively increases load and warrants future research. Clinician and researchers can be confident about these methodological approaches and the cohort study, from which useful clinical tools should result, is feasible. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: IV

    Management of plantar heel pain:a best practice guide informed by a systematic review, expert clinical reasoning and patient values

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    OBJECTIVE: To develop a best practice guide for managing people with plantar heel pain (PHP). METHODS: Mixed-methods design including systematic review, expert interviews and patient survey. DATA SOURCES: Medline, Embase, CINAHL, SPORTDiscus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, trial registries, reference lists and citation tracking. Semi-structured interviews with world experts and a patient survey. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating any intervention for people with PHP in any language were included subject to strict quality criteria. Trials with a sample size greater than n=38 were considered for proof of efficacy. International experts were interviewed using a semi-structured approach and people with PHP were surveyed online. RESULTS: Fifty-one eligible trials enrolled 4351 participants, with 9 RCTs suitable to determine proof of efficacy for 10 interventions. Forty people with PHP completed the online survey and 14 experts were interviewed resulting in 7 themes and 38 subthemes. There was good agreement between the systematic review findings and interview data about taping (SMD: 0.47, 95% CI 0.05 to 0.88) and plantar fascia stretching (SMD: 1.21, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.63) for first step pain in the short term. Clinical reasoning advocated combining these interventions with education and footwear advice as the core self-management approach. There was good expert agreement with systematic review findings recommending stepped care management with focused shockwave for first step pain in the short-term (OR: 1.89, 95% CI 1.18 to 3.04), medium-term (SMD 1.31, 95% CI 0.61 to 2.01) and long-term (SMD 1.67, 95% CI 0.88 to 2.45) and radial shockwave for first step pain in the short term (OR: 1.66, 95% CI 1.00 to 2.76) and long term (OR: 1.78, 95% CI 1.07 to 2.96). We found good agreement to 'step care' using custom foot orthoses for general pain in the short term (SMD: 0.41, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.74) and medium term (SMD: 0.55, 95% CI 0.09 to 1.02). CONCLUSION: Best practice from a mixed-methods study synthesising systematic review with expert opinion and patient feedback suggests core treatment for people with PHP should include taping, stretching and individualised education. Patients who do not optimally improve may be offered shockwave therapy, followed by custom orthoses
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