Wasuwat Kitisomprayoonkul MD*
Affiliation : * Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand
Objective : To translate the ID Pain scale into Thai and validate this scale.
Material and Method: The 6-item ID Pain scale was translated into Thai. The final version was tested in 100 patients.
Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive validity were calculated.
Results : Twenty-four patients were neuropathic, 49 were nociceptive and 27 were mixed pain. Forty-six patients have chronic
pain.  Seventy-five  were  female.  Sensitivity  and  specificity  for  diagnosis  of  neuropathic  pain  were  83%  and  80%.  The
predictive validity using area under the ROC curve of the neuropathic, mixed and nociceptive pain groups were 0.890 (95%
CI 0.824-0.955), 0.587 (95% CI 0.464-0.709) and 0.147 (95% CI 0.071-0.224), respectively.
Conclusion : The Thai ID Pain scale is brief, convenient to complete and had good predictive validity for screening of
neuropathic pain. Prediction validity of mixed pain is moderate and of nociceptive pain is low.
Keywords : Neuropathic pain, Diagnostic tools, Psychometric assessment
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