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Fibromyalgia
Patients Not All The Same
Excerpt by Kathleen Doheny,
HealthDay
Fibromyalgia patients, who suffer pain
in the muscles, joints, ligaments and tendons, are not all the
same and can be classified into three distinct subgroups, a new
study suggests.
Researchers from the University
of Michigan and other institutions are hopeful the discovery,
published in October's issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism,
will help to better tailor treatment for the chronic disorder.
"Fibromyalgia patients are
such a diverse group of patients, they cannot all be the same,"
says study co-author Dr. Thorsten Giesecke, a University of Michigan
research fellow.
For reasons unknown, people with
fibromyalgia have increased sensitivity to pain that occurs in
areas called their "tender points." Common ones are
the front of the knees, the elbows, the hip joints, the neck and
spine. People may also experience sleep disturbances, morning
stiffness, irritable bowel syndrome, anxiety and other symptoms.
Fibromyalgia affects an estimated
3 million to 6 million Americans, primarily women of childbearing
age, according to the American College of Rheumatology.
Giesecke and his fellow researchers
evaluated 97 fibromyalgia patients, including 85 women and 12
men. The patients underwent a two-day series of tests, answering
questions about their coping strategies and personality traits
-- particularly their emotional well-being. They were also tested
for sensitivity to pressure and pain.
After the evaluations, the researchers
found the patients fell into three subgroups that refute conventional
wisdom.
"It's generally been thought
that fibromyalgia patients who have higher distress have higher
pain sensitivities," Giesecke says.
In other words, it was believed
that those with fibromyalgia who were prone to emotional difficulties
such as depression and anxiety were more likely to experience
greater physical pain.
But in his study, that didn't bear
out.
The first subgroup, with 50 patients,
included those who had moderate levels of anxiety and depression.
They also felt they had moderate control over their pain, and
they experienced moderate to low levels of pain.
The second group, with 31 patients,
had high levels of anxiety and depression. They felt they had
the least control over their pain, and they suffered high levels
of tenderness.
But the third group, with 16 patients,
reported the lowest levels of anxiety and depression and the highest
control over their pain. Yet the testing showed they experienced
the highest levels of physical pain.
Some patients have extreme pain
but no psychological problems, Giesecke says, while others have
moderate pain tenderness but fairly positive moods. Giesecke says
a more positive frame of mind may help reduce the levels of pain
that sufferers experience.
"Just because they do well
in cognitive and psychological tests doesn't mean they don't have
increased pain sensitivity," he says.
The findings, he says, may persuade
some skeptics that fibromyalgia is a real disease and not "all
in one's head." The findings may also help tailor treatments,
he says.
For instance, antidepressants might
not work well on group three, whose members were not depressed.
They might benefit from exercise therapy instead, Giesecke says.
About 4 percent of the U.S. population
has the condition, Giesecke says.
Bruce Naliboff, a professor of
medical psychology at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine
and on staff at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System,
calls the new research "a very good study."
"To better understand fibromyalgia
and to have better treatment, it's important to find out, is it
a homogeneous group?" he says.
Clearly, Giesecke found it is not,
Naliboff adds. Some patients who have extreme tenderness don't
have many emotional issues, which was not expected.
"It's easy to say it's all
in their head," says Naliboff, who works with patients who
have other conditions with psychological components, such as inflammatory
bowel disease. The study will help prove that's not so, he adds.
More information
Check Fibromyalgia
in our Diseases
& Conditions section
More articles
on Fibromyalgia
To learn more about fibromyalgia,
visit the American
Academy of Family Physicians and the National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases".
Reference
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