Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (fibromyalgia)
4,687 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 25-year-old woman was admitted in our hospital with back pain and both hip joint pain. Pain was abruptly occurred from the beginning of March 1990. Physical examination revealed wide spread pain (occipital area, both shoulder, lumber area, bilateral gluteal area, inguinal area, both Achilles-plantar area) and more than 12 tender points (occiput, trapezius, second rib, supraspinatus, gluteal, greater trochanter, hip joints, pubic bone). Laboratory examination showed no abnormal findings except ANF (1:160). Any examination including X-ray, bone scintigraphy, CT and MRI did not disclose spondylitis, sacroiliitis and enthesopathy. She was diagnosed as primary fibromyalgia/fibrositis syndrome. Treatment with maprotine hydrochloride (30 mg/day) and phenobarbital (120 mg/day) brought approximately 1/3 reduction of pain and tenderness. Psychoanalysis revealed that she had psychological conflicts against her parents and her colleagues at the work. EEG showed a borderline record with irregular basic pattern and 14 & 6 Hz positive burst at the sleep stage. Although the newly proposed criteria for the classification of fibromyalgia was proposed by ACR, fibromyalgia/fibrositis syndrome has been seldom discussed in the Japanese literature. As this syndrome is frequently associated with various rheumatic diseases, hypothyroidism and malignant diseases, we should pay much more attention to understand this syndrome.
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PMID:[Fibromyalgia (fibrositis) syndrome--a case report]. 192

The scapulocostal syndrome, a hitherto insufficiently understood condition, was clinically studied in 201 cases. The main findings were: (i) pain was the presenting symptom in all cases and was mainly cervicobrachial (90%); (ii) the syndrome is a definable entity within the wide spectrum of fibromyalgia (fibrositis); (iii) the pain originates mainly from an enthesopathy of the serratus posterior superior muscle; and (iv) physical degeneration was present in 76.5% of patients. Conservative treatment, successful in 95.9% of cases, consisted of an intralesional injection of a steroid-analgesic-mixture of 1 ml Celestone-Soluspan (Scherag) plus 1.8 ml Xylotox E80A (Astra), and physical rehabilitation. It was deducted that the dyskinesia was mainly due to an overload of the scapulocostal articulation, forcing the rib cage down to exert a stretching force on the serratus posterior superior muscle. The operation of 'serratotomy' (severing the serratus posterior superior muscle) was performed with excellent results in 6 patients in whom conservative treatment failed, and is described here for the first time.
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PMID:The scapulocostal syndrome. 204 65