毅力和自我控制与脊柱手术后患者报告的结果有关吗?

M. Dupont, Kasra Araghi, Daniel Shinn, S. Qureshi, S. Iyer
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摘要

背景:坚毅被定义为对长期目标的坚持和热情,而自我控制被定义为在暂时满足的诱惑或消遣面前调节冲动的能力,它们被证明是职业成就的预测因素。它们在卫生保健结果中的作用还不太清楚。目的:我们试图确定毅力和自我控制是否与脊柱手术后患者报告的结果测量(PROMs)相关。方法:我们对2017年3月至2020年10月期间由一名接受过奖学金培训的脊柱外科医生接受颈椎或腰椎手术的成年患者进行了回顾性研究。我们纳入了接受前路颈椎椎间盘切除术和融合术、颈椎椎间盘置换术、微创椎板切除术/椎板成形术(MI-D)或微创经椎间孔腰椎椎体间融合术(MI-TLIF)的患者,随访至少1年。术后1年收集毅力和自我控制评分。术前和术后6个时间点采集prom。在身体或心理健康方面获得实质性临床益处(SCB)的患者与没有获得实质性临床益处的患者之间,比较了毅力和自我控制能力。还评估了毅力/自我控制与PROMs变化之间的关系。结果:在纳入分析的129例患者中,我们发现在心理健康方面达到SCB的患者比没有达到SCB的患者具有显著更高的毅力得分。在双变量分析中,自我控制与MI-D后1年和2年随访中腿部疼痛评分的更大改善相关。对于MI-TLIF队列,在6周时,毅力与短表12心理成分评分的较小变化相关,而在6个月时,自我控制与患者报告的结果测量信息系统身体功能的较小变化相关。毅力和自我控制在其他时间点与prom无关。结论:本回顾性研究发现,在大多数脊柱手术患者的术后时间点,毅力和自我控制与prom没有显著相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are Grit and Self-Control Associated With Patient-Reported Outcomes Following Spine Surgery?
Background: Grit, defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals, and self-control, defined as the capacity to regulate impulses in the presence of momentarily gratifying temptations or diversion, have shown to be predictors of professional achievement. Their role in health care outcomes is less well understood. Purpose: We sought to determine whether grit and self-control are associated with patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) following spine surgery. Methods: We conducted a retrospective review of adult patients who underwent cervical or lumbar procedures by a single fellowship-trained spine surgeon between March 2017 and October 2020. We included patients who underwent anterior cervical discectomy and fusion, cervical disk replacement, minimally invasive laminectomy/laminoplasty (MI-D), or minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (MI-TLIF) with minimum 1-year follow-up. Grit and self-control scores were collected 1 year after the surgery. PROMs were collected preoperatively and at 6 postoperative timepoints. Grit and self-control were compared between patients who achieved substantial clinical benefit (SCB) in either physical or mental health versus those who did not. The association between grit/self-control and change in PROMs was also assessed. Results: In the 129 patients included in the analysis, we found that patients who achieved SCB in mental health had significantly higher grit scores than those who did not. In bivariate analysis, self-control was associated with greater improvement in leg pain scores at 1-year and 2-year follow-up following an MI-D. For the MI-TLIF cohort, grit was associated with a smaller change in Short Form 12 mental component score at 6 weeks, and self-control was associated with a smaller change in Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Physical Function at the 6-month timepoint. Grit and self-control were not associated with PROMs at other timepoints. Conclusion: This retrospective review found that grit and self-control were not significantly associated with PROMs at most postoperative timepoints in patients who underwent spine surgery.
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