Abstract

Symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in patients with hand injuries may delay return to work, even when criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV are not met. This study investigated which biomedical and psychosocial factors relate to symptoms of acute PTSD in hand-injured patients. Sixty-seven employed patients with hand injuries completed a number of questionnaires. The following factors were investigated: sociodemographic characteristics, injury severity, accident location, pain, satisfaction with hand functioning, aesthetics of the hand, social support, and coping styles. The primary outcome measure was the number of symptoms of PTSD. We analyzed factors that were univariately significantly associated with symptoms of PTSD using linear regression analysis, and explored interaction effects. One patient met the criteria for PTSD; 44 patients experienced symptoms but did not meet the criteria (median, 1; interquartile range (IQR), 0-2); 22 patients experienced no symptoms of PTSD. Patients had a median pain score of 30 (IQR, 10-45), median satisfaction score of 60 (IQR, 45-70), median aesthetics score of 66.7 (IQR, 45.8-79.2), median palliative coping style score of 16 (IQR, 14.8-17.3), and median avoidance coping style of 15 (IQR, 13-16). Symptoms of PTSD were associated with pain (r, .530; p < .001), satisfaction with hand function (r, -.451; p < .001), aesthetics (r, -.320; p = .009), palliative coping style (r, .281; p = .022) and avoidance coping style (r, .283; p = .022). Pain and aesthetics remained significant after regression analysis. No interaction effects were significant. Pain and aesthetics statistically predict symptoms of acute PTSD in patients with acute hand injuries. Patients with disproportionate pain or dissatisfaction with aesthetics should be evaluated for PTSD. Prognostic IV.

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