J Korean Acad Rehabil Med.  2003 Jun;27(3):404-409.

The Reliability of Patient Pain Drawings Using 3D Virtual Human Body System

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Korea University College of Medicine, Korea. yykang@unitel.co.kr
  • 2Department of Industrial Engineering, Hanyang University, Korea.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability of patient pain drawings using a 3-dimensional (3D) virtual human body system. METHOD: Pain drawings were collected from thirty-four patients with various types of musculoskeletal pain. On the first clinic visit, patients were instructed to draw in their pain areas on a diagram depicting the body (P1). The examining physiatrist, blinded to the patients drawing, also drew in the pain areas on a separate diagram based on thorough history taking (D). After 2 to 9 days without treatment, patients repeated their pain drawings (P2). A second physiatrist input each of the pain drawings into thePain Chart System (PCS), for comparison of pain distribution sites and areas among the three drawings. The weighted-sum of comparison algorithms was calculated for similarity determinations between drawings. RESULTS: The similarity values between P1 and P2, and P1 and D were 0.63+/-0.18 (mean+/-S.D.) and 0.62+/-0.18 (mean+/-S.D.), respectively, reflecting a high reliability of pain drawings. CONCLUSION: High test-retest and inter-individual reliability of successive pain drawings suggest that pain drawings may be a useful tool to describe the painful sites.

Keyword

Pain drawing; Reliability; 3D virtual human body

MeSH Terms

Ambulatory Care
Human Body*
Humans
Humans*
Musculoskeletal Pain
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