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Table 3 The association between baseline characteristics and patient reported satisfaction

From: Higher preoperative pain catastrophizing increases the risk of low patient reported satisfaction after carpal tunnel release: a prospective study

Preoperative

Odds ratio for low patient reported satisfaction following CTR

Odds ratio

95% CI

p

PCS

 Unadjusteda

1. 08

1. 05–1. 11

< 0. 001*

 + Demographicsb

1. 09

1. 06–1. 12

< 0. 001*

 + Disabilityc

1. 05

1. 01–1. 10

0. 022*

EQ-5D

 Unadjusteda

0. 13

0. 03–0. 51

0. 004*

 + Demographicsb

0. 10

0. 02–0. 46

0. 003*

 + Disabilityc

0. 82

0. 09–7. 82

0. 869

DASH

 Unadjusteda

1. 04

1. 02–1. 05

< 0. 001*

 + Demographicsb

1. 04

1. 02–1. 06

< 0. 001*

 + Disabilityc

1. 02

1. 00–1. 05

0. 056

Distal motor latency

 Unadjusteda

0. 83

0. 68–1. 01

0. 063

 + Demographicsb

0. 78

0. 63–0. 98

0. 030*

 + Disabilityc

0. 75

0. 55–1. 02

0. 067

Living alone

 Unadjusted a

0. 70

0. 35–1. 41

0. 320

 + Demographics b

0. 69

0. 33–1. 44

0. 321

 + Disability c

0. 36

0. 11–1. 81

0. 092

  1. Multiple logistic regression analysis on the association between baseline characteristics and patient reported satisfaction 12 months postoperative
  2. *Denotes statistical significance
  3. aUnadjusted crude association on odds ratio for low patient reported satisfaction
  4. bAdjusted for age, gender, living alone and operation technique
  5. cAdjusted for age, gender, operation technique, living alone and preoperative scores (PCS, EQ-5D, DASH and distal motor latency)