# Ecological Pain and Physical Activity Volume and Patterns in Older Adults

**Authors:** Yurun Cai, Paul Scott, Julia Hooker, Ann Barney, Sophia Holena

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3371 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how pain in older adults affects their daily physical activity levels and patterns over time.

## Contribution

The study introduces a method to assess how pain severity and distribution dynamically influence physical activity in older adults.

## Key findings

- Back pain significantly reduces activity counts, increases fragmentation, and decreases active minutes.
- Pain severity and distribution vary throughout the day, with impacts on activity weakening as the day progresses.
- Individualized pain management is recommended, especially early in the day for older adults with multisite pain.

## Abstract

Chronic pain is associated with lower physical activity (PA) levels in older adults. However, pain characteristics change over time, and the impacts of changes in pain levels on daily PA quantities and patterns remain unknown. The PRIME pilot study recruited 30 older adults (mean age=74.1±6.0y) with multisite pain (≥2 pain sites in shoulder, elbow, hand/wrist, back, hip, knee, or ankle/foot) in Pittsburgh and surrounding areas in Pennsylvania. Pain characteristics (e.g., severity, laterality, interference) were measured using questionnaires during the 2-hour clinic visit. After the clinic visit, ecological pain was assessed using Qualtrics surveys four times a day, along with Actigraph accelerometer assessment on the non-dominant wrist for 14 days. Linear regression models showed that participants with back pain had significantly lower activity counts (β=-493,271, p = 0.020), higher activity fragmentation (β = 5.0%, p = 0.005), and fewer active minutes (β=-88.4, p = 0.017). Number of pain sites and severity of hand/wrist pain decreased over a day (β=-0.08, p = 0.019; β=-0.09, p = 0.042, respectively) but tended to be stable across 14 days. Linear mixed models showed that every one-unit higher in overall pain severity at one time point was associated with 28,480 fewer activity counts at the subsequent time point (p = 0.012), and these associations were weaker at later time points over a day (p = 0.011). The severity and distribution of pain vary throughout the day, and the impact of pain severity on daily activity weakens as the day progresses. Individualized pain management programs should be provided to older adults with varying pain characteristics, particularly early in the day.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762999