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Understanding How Patients With Lumbar Radiculopathy Make Sense of and Cope With Their Symptoms

2024· review· en· 5 citations· W4393180239 sur OpenAlex· 10.7759/cureus.56987

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Dossier post-publication

Nature
Retraction
Motif
Concerns/Issues about Human Subject Welfare;Concerns/Issues about Referencing/Attributions;Lack of IRB/IACUC Approval and/or Compliance;
Date
3/5/2025 0:00
Signalé par OpenAlex ?
Oui

Source : Retraction Watch, jointe par DOI. OpenAlex consigne la rétractation dans is_retracted, un booléen sur un espace d'états à au moins quatre valeurs ; il ne peut donc exprimer ni une expression de préoccupation, ni une correction, ni un rétablissement, et les rapporte comme false, ce qui se lit comme « rien à signaler ».

Résumé

Lumbar radiculopathy, characterized by pain radiating along a nerve root, significantly diminishes the quality of life due to its neuropathic nature. Patients' understanding of their illness and the coping strategies they employ directly influence how they manage their condition. Understanding these illness representations from the patient's perspective is crucial for healthcare providers seeking to optimize treatment outcomes. This study adopted a qualitative interpretive/constructive paradigm to explore this dynamic. A qualitative evidence synthesis approach, utilizing best-fit framework synthesis for data extraction, was applied to analyze primary qualitative studies focused on patient experiences with lumbar radiculopathy. Using SPiDER (Sample, Phenomenon of interest, Design, Evaluation, Research type) to guide the search strategy, extracted data was mapped against the Common-Sense Model of Self-Regulation (CSM) framework. Sixteen studies, with moderate to minor methodological quality concerns, were included in the analysis. Data mapping across CSM domains generated 14 key review findings. Results suggest that patients with high-threat illness representations often exhibit maladaptive coping behaviors (e.g., activity avoidance) driven by emotional responses. In contrast, problem-solving techniques appear to contribute to positive outcomes (e.g., exercise adherence and effective self-management) in patients who perceive their condition as less threatening. These findings highlight the potential benefits of interventions designed to reduce perceived threat levels and enhance self-efficacy in patients with lumbar radiculopathy, leading to improved self-management and ultimately better health outcomes.

Récupéré en direct depuis OpenAlex et désinversé. Les résumés ne sont pas conservés dans cette base de données : les index inversés représentent 8,6 Go des 9,3 Go de texte de la base, et le serveur dispose de 13 Go libres.

La notice

Revue
Cureus
Thématique
Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
Domaine
Medicine
Établissements canadiens
Centre for Global Health Research
Organismes subventionnaires
Mots-clés
Coping (psychology)Psychological interventionData extractionQualitative researchPsychologyMedicineClinical psychologyMEDLINEPsychiatry
Résumé présent dans OpenAlex
oui