RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ANALOGIC VISUAL SCALE FOR FEAR OF MOVEMENT AND TAMPA SCALE OF KINESIOPHOBIA APPLIED IN PATIENTS AND BREAST CANCER SURVIVORS
Keywords:
Breast Cancer, Kinesiophobia, PsychometricAbstract
Purpose: The aim of this study is to verify if there is a relationship between the Analogic Visual Scale (AVS; 0–10) for fear of movement and the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK) in patient/survivors with breast cancer. Methodology: Twentyfour women with breast cancer (age: 52.29±8.28 years, range: 35–64 years) attended a single day of evaluation. The fear of movement was assessed by the two psychometric measurements as follows: (1) AVS, a metric rule printed with a scale ranging from 0 (“not afraid at all”) to 100 mm (“complete afraid”) for using the ipsilateral limb affected by the surgical and (2) TSK, the total score ranging from 17 to 68. TSK with higher scores represents the increasing of the kinesiophobia. The TSK was transformed to the same range scale as AVS, in which 17 is 0 and 68 is 100, for comparison. The relationship between AVS and TSK was investigated with a linear regression analysis. The variability between scales was tested using the coefficient of variation (CV). Results: We did not find a relationship between AVS and TSK (r=0.008, R²<0.0001, p=0.971). The CV was 56.52%±47.51%, with 95%CI ranging from 36.45 to 76.58. Conclusion: There is no relationship between AVS and TSK; hence, they should not be used interchangeably to measure the fear of movement. Therefore, general kinesiophobia may not represent the specific kinesiophobia in women with breast cancer.
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Copyright (c) 2021 Vitor Marques, Wanderson Santos, Naiany Silva, Raquel Schincaglia, Carlos Vieira

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.