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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (
fibromyalgia
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A follow-up study of 118 patients was performed to determine the effect of various conservative treatments for MPD after six months to 12 years. Of the patients, 82% were females; 62 were females younger than 40 years old. During treatment, patients were made aware of
muscle spasm
, and consciousness of the role of muscles in MPD was raised. Of 105 patients who were contacted, 65 had no further problems, 26 thought the problem was improved and under control, and 14 had not improved or had sought treatment elsewhere. Musculature and psychological factors play major roles in the
MPD syndrome
.
...
PMID:Follow-up evaluation of 105 patients with myofascial pain-dysfunction syndrome. 28 21
The oral health of twenth-two patients with a diagnosis of
myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome
was evaluated. Radiographs, photographs, study casts, visual and digital clinical examinations, hematologic data, blood pressure, and periodontal examinations were used with each patient. A review of the literature indicated a variety of causes for facial pain, including Costen's syndrome, muscle fatique and
spasm
, occlusion, and psychogenic factors. This study revealed the following trends: (1) The periodontal health of patients with the
myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome
appears to be better than anticipated. (2) Bruxism accounts for a healthy dental apparatus when other diseases are not present. (3) Groups of muscles, other than the masticatory group, may contribute to the
myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome
. (4) Patients presented with various ranges of malocclusions and normal occlusions, deep overbites and overjets, complete dentitions, and missing teeth (either equally missing right and left or unequally missing right and left). This article also discusses clinical considerations in the diagnosis of the
myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome
and offers a practical, physiologic approach to treatment. We conclude that how one uses his mandible is more of a causative factor than the relationships of the teeth.
...
PMID:Oral considerations of the myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome. 106 26
Using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, the following parameters were determined in the resting musculus erector spinae of five patients suffering from chronic low back pain, five patients with
fibromyalgia
, and five healthy controls: Inorganic phosphate (Pi), phosphocreatine (PCr), ATP gamma, ATP alpha, ATP beta. The intracellular pH was derived from the chemical shift of Pi referenced to the PCr resonance. In addition, the Pi-Index was calculated according to the formula: Pi/(Pi + PCr). We discovered a tendency towards a shift of the Pi resonance in the alcalic direction, which was the larger, the stronger
muscle spasm
was found on palpation. The pH showed the most reliable relationship to the clinical status of
muscle spasm
. The surprising finding that there is no acidification within the spasmed muscle indicates that generalized hypoxia does not exist in this tissue. This has already been shown with PO2 measurements. An intracellular acidification is only recorded during maximal isometric contraction. Thus, ischemia cannot be responsible for pain experienced during
muscle spasm
.
...
PMID:[Recording muscle spasm in the musculus erector spinae using in vivo 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy in patients with chronic lumbalgia and generalized tendomyopathies]. 147 7
Pain related to
fibromyalgia
may consist of a complex interaction of nociceptive, neuropathic, dysregulatory central nervous system and psychosomatic mechanisms. Nociceptor pain is based on the excitation of nervous sensors specialized to signal potentially harmful stimuli, i.e., the nociceptors. Metabolic deficiencies in muscle and neurogenic inflammation induced by the release of substance P and other neuropeptides from the peripheral nerve endings may result in chemical sensitization of nociceptors and an ensuing hyperalgesia particularly present in tender points. Neuropathic pain is due to pathological mechanisms within nerve cells and fibers in the peripheral and central nervous system. Pathophysiology may be related to compression (such as in the carpal tunnel syndrome or a vertebral disk herniation) or regeneration of nerves, resulting in ectopic impulse discharges and disturbances of axonal transport. The ensuing neuronal hyperexcitability and trophic changes induced by a disturbed axonal transport system may be major factors of pain in
fibromyalgia
. Dysregulatory pain denotes pain maintained by dysfunction of efferent control loops. Thus, if spinal motoneuron output results in excessive tension of postural muscle, nociceptors in muscles, tendons and joints might become more excited. Persistent abnormal spinal reflex transmission due to, e.g., peripheral trauma or inappropriate postural habits may result in a vicious circle between muscle hypertension and pain. Similarly, a defective sympathetic control may result in disturbed microcirculation and nociceptor excitation (e.g., in sympathetic algodystrophy). Many symptoms of pain in
fibromyalgia
(trigger points, pain referral, pain associated with
muscle spasm
or neurogenic joint immobilization) can be attributed to abnormal control mechanisms in a complex cybernetic system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathophysiological mechanisms of fibromyalgia. 181 May 27
Several past studies have evaluated the electromyographic activity of myofascial trigger points with conflicting results. This study was performed to determine whether spontaneous activity or motor unit activity was present in patients with focal myofascial pain or
fibromyalgia
. Using routine needle electromyographic techniques, we sampled reproducibly tender focal areas (tender points), similar tender areas with pain referral (trigger points), associated muscle bands and adjacent uninvolved musculature. Twenty-five subjects (14 females, 11 males, mean +/- SD age 43 +/- 14 years) were studied; twenty-one subjects with focal myofascial pain and four with
fibromyalgia
. Spontaneous fibrillatory or positive sharp wave potentials were not found in any muscle in the 25 subjects. There was no evidence of focal motor unit activity in the tender points, trigger points or associated muscle bands in either group. Motor unit recruitment was similar in all areas sampled. We conclude that no electrodiagnostic evidence of ongoing denervation or focal
muscle spasm
is found in association with focal myofascial pain or
fibromyalgia
.
...
PMID:Needle electromyographic evaluation of patients with myofascial or fibromyalgic pain. 203 18
Myofascial pain and dysfunction is the primary diagnosis in a large proportion of facial pain complaints. Myofascial disease can present in the form of trigger points,
fibromyositis
, myositis,
muscle spasm
, and muscle weakness. The purpose of this study is to research for quantifiable physiological differences between groups of normal subjects and myofascial pain dysfunction (MPD) patients. The first specific aim was to determine the opening of the jaw at which maximal isometric tension can be produced by the jaw closing muscles, with the hypothesis that this opening of maximal tension would be less for a group of MPD patients than for a group of normal subjects being tested. The second aim was to test the hypothesis that the maximal isometric bite forces for the two groups would differ. Patients with mandibular dysfunction are reported to have a lower maximal bite than normal subjects. Bite force was measured with the T-Scan system. An 80 micron horseshoe-shaped sensor connected to a dedicated IBM XT computer recorded the data. A self-contained printer produced the hard copy for later analysis. Vertical dimension or jaw opening was increased in 0.5-mm increments using double flat plane appliances standardized by the Relator. A MANOVA was used for statistical analysis of the data. MPD patients had significantly higher bite forces at 8.0, 8.5, 9, and 9.5 mm. Normal subjects had higher force values at 5.0 mm. There was no significant difference in mean maximal bite force between groups.
...
PMID:Length-tension relations of the masticatory elevator muscles in normal subjects and pain dysfunction patients. 207 94
Primary fibromyalgia syndrome, also inappropriately called "fibrositis," is a clinically recognizable nonarticular rheumatic condition with diffuse and chronic musculoskeletal aching and stiffness, accompanied by exaggerated tenderness at characteristic sites on physical examination. Results of muscle biopsy from 12 well-defined cases of primary
fibromyalgia
syndrome without any history of trauma have been published recently. Light microscopic examination revealed no evidence of inflammation. Histochemical analysis demonstrated type II fiber atrophy in seven patients and the "moth-eaten" appearance of type I fibers in five patients. Electron microscopic findings were most impressive, and included myofibrillar lysis with deposition of glycogen and abnormal mitochondria, as well as subsarcolemmal accumulation of glycogen and mitochondria in all 12 patients and papillary projections of sarcolemmal membrane in 11 patients. Mechanisms of these significant muscle changes in primary
fibromyalgia
syndrome are uncertain but may include subclinical injury of
muscle spasm
.
...
PMID:Pathologic changes in muscle in primary fibromyalgia syndrome. 346 7
Upper medial trapezius muscle biopsy was obtained from 12 primary
fibromyalgia
syndrome (PFS) patients (age 17 to 40 years) and studied with histochemistry, light and electron microscopy (EM). No evidence of inflammation was found in any case. Significant histochemical abnormalities were Type II fiber atrophy in 7 and moth-eaten appearance of Type I fibers in 5. EM revealed segmental muscle fiber necrosis with lipid and glycogen deposition as well as subsarcolemmal mitochondrial accumulation in all cases. Papillary projections of sarcolemmal membrane were seen in 11 patients. These observations in 12 PFS cases without obvious muscle trauma indicate definite but nonspecific muscle changes which we suspect are secondary to chronic
muscle spasm
and ischemia of unknown etiology.
...
PMID:Muscle pathology in primary fibromyalgia syndrome: a light microscopic, histochemical and ultrastructural study. 659 30
Myofascial pain syndrome
is an entity with which every podiatrist should be familiar. These disorders are usually the result of acute or chronic injury and are characterized by the presence of trigger areas and symptom complexes that have definite patterns. Once these patterns have been learned, the sources of pain can be readily predicted. Most of these conditions can be effectively treated in the podiatrist's office by local block techniques and/Or by application of Fluori-Methane spray. It is important to consult the appropriate medical specialist for diagnostic confirmation or for aid in treatment if uncertainty exists. Treatment regimens in this group of syndromes are based on the notion that in these disorders there is a self-sustaining cycle of pain-
spasm
-pain persisting after the precipitating cause has disappeared, which may be permanently abolished by interruption of the reflex mechanisms. In order to produce optimal results, the trigger area must be accurately located and treatment directed toward its elimination. Physical therapy and active exercise are necessary adjuncts to local blocks. Not all patients respond, and in many the response is slow, incomplete, and/or only temporary, but there are those in whom these simple measures provide relief of pain and disability in a manner as dramatic as one is likely to encounter in practice.
...
PMID:Myofascial pain syndromes and their effect on the lower extremities. 704 May 34
A variety of conditions are frequently associated with the occurrence of head and neck pain. The purposes of this review are: to describe the characteristics of several musculoskeletal, neurological, and systemic conditions frequently cited as possible causes of head and neck pain and to suggest a new technique for treating head and neck pain. The characteristics of musculoskeletal conditions, such as
muscle spasm
, tendinitis, trigger points, and joint inflammation, and their relationship to head and neck pain are considered. The features and clinical implications of neurologic conditions, such as atypical facial pain, trigeminal and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and neurogenic inflammation, are also described. The distinguishing characteristics of headaches, including cluster, tension, chronic daily, rebound, posttraumatic, and postlumbar puncture, are detailed. This review also addresses the contributions of systemic disorders, such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and the variants, and rheumatoid-related conditions, like dermatomyositis, temporal arteritis, Lyme's disease, and
fibromyalgia
, to head and neck pain. The results of a recent pilot study of the effectiveness of intraoral circulating ice water for resolving symptoms related to head and neck pain secondary to neurogenic inflammation are presented in this work. Ice water circulating through hollow metal tubes was placed intraorally for 15 minutes in the posterior maxillary area on 12 individuals with cervical pain and
muscle spasm
. In nine of these individuals, reduced cervical pain perception, upper trapezius electromyography signal reduction, and increased cervical range of motion was produced. Six out of 12 individuals had accompanying headache, which was reduced or eliminated in four cases. These findings suggest a strong trigemino-cervical relationship to neck pain and headache.
...
PMID:Head and neck pain review: traditional and new perspectives. 889 41
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