Abstract
Background: Lower limb amputation (LLA), due to non-traumatic causes such as vascular diseases and diabetes, significantly impacts patients' physical, psychological, and social well-being. While multidisciplinary rehabilitation programs commonly address physical and functional recovery, psychological and subjective experiences related to limb loss remain less explored. Thus, this preliminary study aimed to investigate the psychological and behavioral adaptation processes in patients undergoing rehabilitation following lower limb amputation. Methods: A preliminary observational study with a mixed-method approach based on quantitative and qualitative data triangulation was conducted. This approach involves integrating multiple data sources and methodologies-in this case, quantitative psychometric measures and qualitative interviews via the prospective of amputees and those who use prostheses-to enhance the validity and depth of the research findings. Results: Fourteen inpatient amputees and fourteen inpatient prosthesis users (years: 66.6 ± 2.5 for amputee and 61.5 ± 1.9 for prosthesis users, male amputees: 85.7%, male prosthesis users: 100%) of a research hospital in the North of Italy were assessed using validated psychometric tools (GAD-7, PHQ-9, PID-5-BF, BIS, ASonA) alongside semi-structured interviews analyzed through the Interpretive Description approach. Key themes highlighted illness acceptance, prosthesis adaptation, body image, medication and behavioral adherence, anxiety, depression, quality of life, denial, optimism, and social support. Overall, anxiety-depressive symptomatology tended to decrease with the prosthesis, and pharmacological and behavioral adherence improved, as did the disease acceptance. Body image was fairly preserved in all patients despite some fears of others' judgment with respect to the prosthesis. Interestingly, there was poor agreement between quantitative and qualitative data in both the amputee' and prosthesis users' groups: while the former returned a partial and neutral picture, a more multifaceted picture emerged from the interviews collected. Conclusions: These findings underline the importance of integrating quantitative psychometric evaluations with qualitative methods to comprehensively understand patients' adaptive experiences. Such combined insights are essential to inform tailored psychological interventions throughout the rehabilitation journey.