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

We assessed for the first time the long-term maintenance of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)-induced analgesia in patients with chronic widespread pain due to fibromyalgia. Forty consecutive patients were randomly assigned, in a double-blind fashion, to 2 groups: one receiving active rTMS (n=20) and the other, sham stimulation (n=20), applied to the left primary motor cortex. The stimulation protocol consisted of 14 sessions: an "induction phase" of 5 daily sessions followed by a "maintenance phase" of 3 sessions a week apart, 3 sessions a fortnight apart, and 3 sessions a month apart. The primary outcome was average pain intensity over the last 24 hours, measured before each stimulation from day 1 to week 21 and at week 25 (1 month after the last stimulation). Other outcomes measured included quality of life, mood and anxiety, and several parameters of motor cortical excitability. Thirty patients completed the study (14 in the sham stimulation group and 16 in the active stimulation group). Active rTMS significantly reduced pain intensity from day 5 to week 25. These analgesic effects were associated with a long-term improvement in items related to quality of life (including fatigue, morning tiredness, general activity, walking, and sleep) and were directly correlated with changes in intracortical inhibition. In conclusion, these results suggest that TMS may be a valuable and safe new therapeutic option in patients with fibromyalgia.
...
PMID:Long-term maintenance of the analgesic effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation in fibromyalgia. 2145 Apr 3

Objectives. Fibromyalgia (FM) and multiple sclerosis (MS) are known to cause disability and have an impact on physical functioning, social functioning, and emotional well-being of affected individuals. The aim of this study was to compare pressure pain threshold, health and functional status in females with FM and MS who were ambulatory. Methods. Control point scores (CPS), total myalgic scores (TMS; using an algometer), tender point (TP) counts, and chronic widespread pain were assessed in females with FM and MS and in healthy age-matched female controls. The Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ), and the Nottingham Health Profile were performed. The Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) was used to estimate the disability status of persons with MS. Results. Fibromyalgia patients have significantly lower CPS and TMS than MS patients and controls. Multiple sclerosis patients had similar CPS but significantly lower TMS compared to controls. Tender point counts were significantly higher in FM than MS patients and controls. Patients with MS had a higher numbers of TPs with respect to controls. Chronic widespread pain was reported by only three patients with MS and these patients did not meet FM criteria for tender point counts. Fibromyalgia patients had significantly lower FIQ-first item scores than MS patients. FM patients had higher NHP section scores in pain, social isolation, emotional reaction, sleep and energy, but similar physical mobility compared to MS patients. In MS patients energy and physical mobility dimension of NHP and FIQ-first item scores correlated with EDSS (r=0.42, P=0.047, r=0.83, P=0.001, and r=0.62, P=0.001, respectively). Conclusion. This cross-sectional study warrants further research comparing FM and MS, which share a lot of clinical and psychosocial features or may coexist. Chronic pain and related fatigue, social and emotional reactions and disability seem to be important components in FM, so taking care of these components, in other words a biopsychosocial model, may improve disease outcome and quality of life not only in FM but also in MS.
...
PMID:Comparison of pain threshold, health and functional status of females with fibromyalgia and multiple sclerosis: a pilot study. 2494 Oct 53

Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a complex disorder where widespread musculoskeletal pain is associated with many heterogenous symptoms ranging from affective disturbances to cognitive dysfunction and central fatigue. FMS is currently underdiagnosed and often very poorly responsive to pharmacological treatment. Pathophysiology of the disease remains still obscure even if in the last years fine structural and functional cerebral abnormalities have been identified, principally by neurophysiological and imaging studies delineating disfunctions in pain perception, processing and control systems. On such basis, recently, neurostimulation of brain areas involved in mechanism of pain processing and control (primary motor cortex: M1 and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex: DLPFC) has been explored by means of different approaches and particularly through non-invasive brain stimulation techniques (transcranial magnetic and electric stimulation: TMS and tES). Here we summarize studies on tES application in FMS. The great majority of reports, based on direct currents (transcranial direct currents stimulation: tDCS) and targeting M1, showed efficacy on pain measures and less on cognitive and affective symptoms, even if several aspects as maintenance of therapeutical effects and optimal stimulation parameters remain to be established. Differently, stimulation of DLPFC, explored in a few studies, was ineffective on pain and showed limited effects on cognitive and affective symptoms. Very recently new tES techniques as high-density tDCS (HD-tDCS), transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) and tDCS devices for home-based treatment have been explored in FMS with interesting even if very preliminary results opening interesting perspectives for more effective, well tolerated, cheap and easy therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:Brain Modulation by Electric Currents in Fibromyalgia: A Structured Review on Non-invasive Approach With Transcranial Electrical Stimulation. 3080 71