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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (
fibromyalgia
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fibromyalgia
, also known as
fibrositis
and muscle rheumatism, is a common, noninflammatory, painful musculoskeletal disorder. It is common between the ages of 30 and 60 years and has a female to male ratio of 5 to 1. Essential symptoms of
fibrositis
are pain, fatigue,
disturbed sleep
, morning stiffness and local tenderness. Subjective swelling, paresthesia and numbness sometimes occur. Multiple host and environmental factors seem to contribute to the onset and course of
fibromyalgia
. Modest improvement follows treatment by antidepressive agents, physical measures and reduction in stress. In this study 60 patients with
fibromyalgia
were investigated and the clinical characteristics of these patients are described and compared with those in other studies.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of patients with fibromyalgia. 173 98
There continues to be an emerging body of literature related to
fibromyalgia
and the related conditions chronic fatigue syndrome and myofascial pain. During the past year, the most notable contributions included a large multicenter study providing new diagnostic criteria for the classification of
fibromyalgia
and clinical studies describing the overlap of
fibromyalgia
, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain. Pathophysiologic studies were often preliminary and uncontrolled but the focus of these studies on abnormal nociception, neurohormones, and muscle metabolism provides an exciting hypothesis to unify pain, fatigue, and
sleep disturbances
, the primary symptoms of
fibromyalgia
. Unfortunately, new therapeutic trials were neither innovative nor especially encouraging.
...
PMID:Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain syndrome. 206 4
Fibromyalgia
is a chronic rheumatologic disorder. The primary symptoms include musculoskeletal pain and aching,
disturbed sleep
, fatigue, morning stiffness, and local tenderness. It is frequently misdiagnosed, despite being a fairly common, chronic disorder in most primary care clinics. Failure to make this diagnosis often leads to unnecessary medical and surgical treatment. The treatment of
fibromyalgia
syndrome is multifaceted. Goals include reassurance, education about pain management and modification, and symptom reduction. Exercise may be beneficial. Amitriptyline is effective in reducing certain symptoms of
fibromyalgia
, such as pain and lack of restful sleep. Narcotics, steroids, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) should be avoided.
...
PMID:Fibromyalgia syndrome. 235 77
This paper traces the history of
disturbed sleep
, deep pain and exhaustion from biblical times to the present. This historical review provides the stage for the papers that follow in this volume on
fibrositis
syndrome.
...
PMID:Fibrositis syndrome: a historical perspective. 269 79
Forty-two patients with primary
fibromyalgia
were randomized into a 20-week program consisting of either cardiovascular fitness (CVR) training or simple flexibility exercises (FLEX) that did not lead to enhanced cardiovascular fitness. Patients were supervised by the same medical fitness instructors. Patients in neither group had contact with members of the other group, and were blinded as to the exercise taught to the alternative group. Groups met for 60 minutes 3 times each week. The compliance rate was 90%. Thirty-eight patients completed the study (18 with CVR training and 20 with FLEX). Blind assessments (standardized in preliminary trials to achieve acceptable inter-rater agreement) were performed by the same 2 examiners. After 20 weeks, patients receiving CVR training showed significantly improved cardiovascular fitness scores compared with those receiving FLEX training (t[35] = -4.22, P less than 0.003). Logistic regression analysis showed clinically and statistically significant improvements in pain threshold scores, which were measured directly over fibrositic tender points, in patients undergoing CVR (t[35] = 2.21, P less than 0.04). There was also a trend toward improvement in pain scores (visual analog scale) in the CVR group, but this did not reach statistical significance. There was no improvement in the percentage of body area affected by fibrositic symptoms or the number of nights per week or hours per night of
disturbed sleep
(self-report inventories). However, compared with the FLEX group, the CVR-trained patients improved significantly in both patient and physician global assessment scores.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A controlled study of the effects of a supervised cardiovascular fitness training program on the manifestations of primary fibromyalgia. 304 73
Research in regard to
fibromyalgia
has greatly increased during the last 5 years. Initially, investigators concentrated on clinical descriptions and diagnostic criteria. Early pathophysiologic aspects studied included
sleep disturbances
and psychiatric aspects of the syndrome. More recently, studies have focused on peripheral tissue abnormalities, including sophisticated studies of abnormal muscle metabolism, immunologic and neurotransmitter abnormalities. Future suggested research directions are reviewed.
...
PMID:Research in fibromyalgia: past, present and future. 316 91
The literature on
fibrositis
(
fibromyalgia
), which originated in the early years of the last century in the UK and proliferated there in the first half of this century, has since diminished there in the last 30 years or so, but has increased in Canada and the US. Criteria suggested for diagnosis have created a syndrome with no diagnostic tests, serological or radiological signs, and no truly objective physical signs, but with predictable tender spots on pressure. The syndrome is largely, but not completely, confined to females, mostly of middle age; the symptoms include widespread aching of more than 3 months' duration,
disturbed sleep
, morning fatigue and stiffness, a failure to respond satisfactorily to any one form of therapy and a tendency to persist over long periods, but without permanent tissue changes. Features of psychological disturbance are present in many patients but not in all or even the majority. Definition of the condition as a disorder of pain modulation - a pain amplification syndrome - would seem to fit the facts best. Most would agree that an abnormal response to stress is an important factor in the appearance of the syndrome, as other stress related disorders, such as the irritable bowel syndrome and tension headaches, may coexist. Response to therapy, whether physical or pharmacological, is on the whole unsatisfactory. This type of patient has been well recognised in hospital clinic and general practice for many years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fibrositis (fibromyalgia). A common non-entity? 328 15
Fibrositis
(
fibromyalgia
) is a common disorder, but is often not considered or diagnosed by clinicians. It is characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain and aching,
disturbed sleep
, fatigue, morning stiffness, and local tenderness. The presence of multiple (seven or more) tender points and widespread pain or aching are necessary and sufficient conditions for diagnosis.
Fibrositis
occurs in a "primary" form, but most commonly in association with other rheumatic diseases where it is a concomitant condition. The designation "myofascial pain syndrome" has replaced older concepts of localized
fibrositis
, and is considered a separate entity.
...
PMID:Fibrositis, fibromyalgia, and musculoskeletal disease: the current status of the fibrositis syndrome. 329 21
The history of psychosomatic medicine in the 20th century is predominantly marked by a concern with studies of major diseases (e.g., angina pectoris, bronchial asthma, diabetes mellitus, essential hypertension, neurodermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, etc.). Traditional physicians also narrowly focus on disease--a trend that began with Morgagni in the 18th century. But disease (defined by structural alterations) is not the only cause of illness and disability. In fact, most persons seeking health care are ill without having a disease. It is only recently that this distinction has been fully made. The various manifestations of ill-health go by a variety of descriptive names--the functional or irritable bowel and hyperventilation syndromes,
fibromyositis
, psychophysiological, functional and somatoform or somatization disorders. They lead to loss of productivity, cost the health care system excessively, produce negative reactions in physicians, and are fertile ground for iatrogenic disease. They do not constitute discrete syndromes but overlap, each also being closely associated with anxiety and depression,
sleep disturbances
or marital disruption. They are the manifestations of sick persons not only of disturbances of bodily systems. They may be precipitated by unemployment, marital discord, bereavement, and job dissatisfaction. Curiously, ill-health has not been the major area of investigative interest of psychosomatic medicine. This presentation will emphasize why it should be, and why proper interventions may radically reduce the cost of medical care, prevent iatrogenic disease, and reduce the use of ill-advised procedures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Some unexplored regions of psychosomatic medicine. 333 83
Fibrositis
is a disorder of musculoskeletal pain and aching with at least a five to one female-to-male ratio. It is most commonly seen between the ages of 40 and 60, and has a prevalence in the clinic of 6 to 15 percent. Its most common mode of presentation involves generalized musculoskeletal pain and aching, but articular pain, axial skeletal pain, myalgias, and neurovascular complaints sometimes predominate. All patients have multiple areas of local tenderness called "tender points" that are easily identified during physical examination, and are diagnostic. Essential symptoms of
fibrositis
are
disturbed sleep
, morning stiffness, and fatigue. Additional rheumatic symptoms include subjective swelling, paresthesias, and numbness. Headaches and irritable bowel syndrome are common nonrheumatic complaints. Modest improvement follows treatment by tricyclic agents such as low-dose cyclobenzaprine and amitriptyline, by physical measures, and by reduction in stress. Remission occurs in 20 percent of patients, but is generally short-lived.
...
PMID:The clinical syndrome of fibrositis. 346 12
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