Background: Investigators seeking to understand the impact of
musculoskeletal disorders commonly use validated outcome instruments to assess
the effect of diseases on physical function and quality of life. However, the
influence of concomitant systemic or musculoskeletal comorbidities on these
scores has not been widely considered in orthopaedic research. The purpose of
this study was to determine how morbidity unrelated to the ankle influences
the perception of physical function and pain by patients with ankle
osteoarthritis.
Methods: Short Form-36 (SF-36) Physical Component Summary (PCS) and
Mental Component Summary (MCS) scores, Ankle Osteoarthritis Scale (AOS) pain
scale scores, demographic data, and systemic and musculoskeletal comorbidities
were determined prospectively for 195 patients with ankle osteoarthritis and
ninety-five age and gender-matched controls. The effect of systemic and
musculoskeletal comorbidities on each of the scores was determined.
Results: On the average, patients with ankle osteoarthritis had a
relatively normal MCS score (47 ± 13 points) and a markedly diminished
PCS score (32 ± 8 points). Both of these scores averaged 50 ± 9
points in the control group. The AOS pain score averaged 61 ± 23 points
in the group with ankle osteoarthritis, whereas it averaged 10 ± 15
points in the control group. We found the perception of ankle pain by patients
with ankle osteoarthritis to be significantly and linearly associated with the
number of other musculoskeletal problems (not related to the foot or
ankle).
Conclusions: The degree of physical impairment associated with ankle
osteoarthritis, as measured with the SF-36, is equivalent to that reported to
be associated with severely disabling medical problems including end-stage
kidney disease and congestive heart failure. The perception of ankle health
status as measured with a validated, patient-oriented, anatomically specific
instrument is influenced by the patients' perception of their overall
musculoskeletal comorbidity status. The authors of clinical studies using
these instruments should adjust for concomitant musculoskeletal disease.