A psychometric study of patients with nail dystrophies

Citation:

Alam M, Moossavi M, Ginsburg I, Scher RK. A psychometric study of patients with nail dystrophies. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 2001;45 (6) :851-856.
A psychometric study of patients with nail dystrophies

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Survey studies suggest that patients with various dermatologic conditions experience concomitant psychologic distress. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine which types of psychologic distress may be correlated with dystrophic disease of the nail in nonpsychiatric patients. METHODS: Fifty-seven adult subjects presenting for treatment of nail dystrophies completed a survey instrument, which included 5 psychometric measures. RESULTS: On average, patients rated the severity of their nail dystrophy and functional deficit higher (7.40/10 and 6.00, respectively) than investigators (6.15 and 3.75, respectively). Compared with age- and sex-matched nonpsychiatric patients, subjects in the study were moderately more anxious and minimally to mildly more depressed. Subjects had moderately depressed total self-concept, but their body image was approximately normal. Overall, subjects exhibited markedly more severe psychologic symptoms (84th percentile) than the normal sample, with the scores on the psychoticism, obsessive-compulsive, and paranoid ideation subscales being the most elevated. CONCLUSION: The subjects with nail dystrophy had markedly exacerbated psychologic symptoms compared with age- and sex-matched nonpsychiatric patients.

Publication Global ID: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11712029
Last updated on 03/11/2015