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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (
fibromyalgia
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain dominates the lives of many patients with hyperlaxity syndromes, most commonly the Benign Joint Hypermobility Syndrome (BJHS/
EDS
). As a result they may experience psychosocial problems, which in many cases severely affects their healthy functioning. Above all is the overriding chronic pain in joints, muscles and ligaments, which arises from an inherent predisposition to the effects of everyday trauma, but other factors such as associated osteoarthritis or
fibromyalgia
are also important. There may also be neurophysiological factors at play producing nociceptive enhancement. Pain and distress of visceral origin can result from laxity of connective tissue within or providing support for the abdominal, thoracic or pelvic viscera leading to hernia, uterine and/or rectal prolapse, mitral valve prolapse or spontaneous pneumothorax. In children joint hyperlaxity is an important (and often unrecognised) source of rheumatic symptoms, which may be ignored or erroneously ascribed to juvenile idiopathic arthritis. The management of pain and distress in the hyperlaxity syndromes requires skill, patience, compassion and understanding. Often the results of conventional anti-rheumatic therapy (including anti-rheumatic drugs and surgery) as applied to other rheumatic diseases are disappointing and innovative approaches are required. Amongst these, for which evidence of efficacy is available, are physiotherapeutic and orthotic stabilisation of hyperlax joints, proprioceptive enhancement and the newer pain management techniques including cognitive behavioural therapy.
...
PMID:Pain, distress and joint hyperlaxity. 1087 11
Thirty patients from a private clinical practice who met the 1990 American College of Rheumatology criteria for
fibromyalgia
syndrome (FS) were followed prospectively through a brainwave-based intervention known as electroencephalograph (EEG)-driven stimulation or
EDS
. Patients were initially treated with
EDS
until they reported noticeable improvements in mental clarity, mood, and sleep. Self-reported pain, then, having changed from vaguely diffuse to more specifically localized, was treated with very modest amounts of physically oriented therapies. Pre- to posttreatment and extended follow-up comparisons of psychological and physical functioning indices, specific FS symptom ratings, and EEG activity revealed statistically significant improvements.
EDS
appeared to be the prime initiator of therapeutic efficacy. Future research is justified for controlled clinical trials and to better understand disease mechanisms.
...
PMID:Treatment of fibromyalgia incorporating EEG-Driven stimulation: a clinical outcomes study. 1140 5
Hypermobility type Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (
EDS
-HT) is an inherited connective tissue disorder clinically diagnosed by the presence of significant joint hypermobility and associated skin manifestations. This article presents a large-scale study that reports the lived experience of
EDS
-HT patients, the broad range of symptoms that individuals with
EDS
-HT experience, and the impact these symptoms have on daily functioning. A 237-item online survey, including validated questions regarding pain and depression, was developed. Four hundred sixty-six (466) adults (90% female, 52% college or higher degree) with a self-reported diagnosis of
EDS
-HT made in a clinic or hospital were included. The most frequently reported symptoms were joint pain (99%), hypermobility (99%), and limb pain (91%). They also reported a high frequency of other conditions including chronic fatigue (82%), anxiety (73%), depression (69%), and
fibromyalgia
(42%). Forty-six percent of respondents reported constant pain often described as aching and tiring/exhausting. Despite multiple interventions and therapies, many individuals (53%) indicated that their diagnosis negatively affected their ability to work or attend school. Our results show that individuals with
EDS
-HT can experience a wide array of symptoms and co-morbid conditions. The degree of constant pain and disability experienced by the majority of
EDS
-HT respondents is striking and illustrates the impact this disorder has on quality of life as well as the clinical challenges inherent in managing this complex connective tissue disorder.
...
PMID:Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type: A characterization of the patients' lived experience. 2425 46
Joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS) and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type (EDS-HT) are two clinically overlapping connective tissue disorders characterized by chronic/recurrent pain, joint instability complications, and minor skin changes. Fatigue and headache are also common, although are not yet considered diagnostic criteria. JHS/
EDS
-HT is a unexpectedly common condition that remains underdiagnosed by most clinicians and pain specialists. This results in interventions limited to symptomatic and non-satisfactory treatments, lacking reasonable pathophysiologic rationale. In this manuscript the fragmented knowledge on pain, fatigue, and headache in JHS/
EDS
is presented with review of the available published information and a description of the clinical course by symptoms, on the basis of authors' experience. Pathogenic mechanisms are suggested through comparisons with other functional somatic syndromes (e.g., chronic fatigue syndrome,
fibromyalgia
, and functional gastrointestinal disorders). The re-writing of the natural history of JHS/
EDS
-HT is aimed to raise awareness among clinical geneticists and specialists treating chronic pain conditions about pain and other complications of JHS/
EDS
-HT. Symptoms' clustering by disease stage is proposed to investigate both the molecular causes and the symptoms management of JHS/
EDS
-HT in future studies.
...
PMID:Re-writing the natural history of pain and related symptoms in the joint hypermobility syndrome/Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type. 2425 47