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Article Abstract

Objectives: Pain assessment is challenging given its subjective nature, and existing assessment tools have limitations, especially for patients having problems with verbal communication. A prior study evaluated the Grasp, a handheld device for assessing pain intensity through squeezing, showing a moderate association with the numeric rating scale (NRS). This study examined an improved version of the Grasp with instant visual feedback through color-coded categories and compared it to NRS.

Methods: Healthy adults underwent two consecutive cold pressor tests (CPTs), reporting pain intensity via NRS or Grasp with colour-coded feedback. Two additional CPTs assessed the association of repeated measurements with both instruments. The Grasp was calibrated to individual strength before CPTs.

Results: Forty-six subjects completed all tests. Pain intensity association between Grasp and NRS was moderate with a mean Kendall's - coefficient (-) of 0.45, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.35-0.56. Repeated Grasp measurements showed a moderate association (- = 0.37, 95% CI 0.27-0.48), while repeated NRS measurements had a stronger association (- = 0.71, 95% CI 0.64-0.78). After adjusting Grasp to individual squeeze strength (resulting in a 0.0-1.0 scale), a simple equation relating NRS value and mean Grasp value was identified: Grasp = 0.091 × NRS. Grouping reports into mild, moderate, and severe pain resulted in agreement proportions across two CPTs of 69% for Grasp and 79% for NRS.

Conclusions: The moderately high agreement proportions for pain intensity categories suggest that the Grasp method with colour-coded feedback may be useful for categorical pain intensity assessment, especially in settings where conventional tools (i.e., NRS) are inconvenient or not feasible.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/sjpain-2025-0018DOI Listing

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