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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (
fibromyalgia
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The occurrence and characteristics of alpha-like activity during non-
REM
(NREM) sleep were examined in 11 subjects suffering from non-inflammatory (non-rheumatoid) musculoskeletal pain--
fibromyalgia
('
fibrositis
'), and in 15 symptom-free controls. Both groups claimed to be good sleepers. Mean percentage alpha-like activity in sleep stages 2, 3, 4 and for NREM as a whole were greatest for the
fibromyalgia
group, but not significantly different from those of the controls. Overlap in the distribution of NREM alpha-like activity in sleep between the two groups indicated that it is not directly related to musculoskeletal symptoms. Spectral analyses showed a frontal area prevalence of this (kappa?) activity in the
fibromyalgia
group.
...
PMID:Alpha-like EEG activity in non-REM sleep and the fibromyalgia (fibrositis) syndrome. 171 31
A double blind, placebo controlled, crossover design study examined overnight sleep physiology, pain, fatigue, and mood symptoms in 12 patients with
fibromyalgia
treated with cyclobenzaprine. Nine patients completed the study. Patients receiving cyclobenzaprine showed a decrease in evening fatigue (F = 4.7, p less than 0.05) and an increase in total sleep time (F = 4.4, p less than 0.05). Pain, including tender point count and dolorimetry, mood ratings, and alpha non-
REM
EEG sleep anomaly were unchanged by cyclobenzaprine.
...
PMID:The effects of cyclobenzaprine on sleep physiology and symptoms in patients with fibromyalgia. 185 14
Fibrositis
(
fibromyalgia
) patients were compared with normal controls in terms of electrophysiology (EEG), self-report indicants of awakening, quality of sleep, behaviourally signalled awakenings, and Symptom Check List 90R (SCL-90R) scores. The results differentiated
fibrositis
patients from normal controls in terms of SCL-90R scores, with
fibrositis
patients showing significantly more psychopathology.
Fibrositis
patients had more alpha EEG sleep and less
REM
and Stage 1 sleep. They were better able to recall their behaviourally signalled awakenings the following morning and reported qualitatively less satisfying sleep than the normal controls. The alpha EEG sleep anomaly may reflect a vigilant arousal state during nocturnal sleep and result in the daytime experience of unrefreshing sleep, psychologic distress, that re-enforces the perpetuation of the sleep-related symptoms.
...
PMID:Sleep physiology and psychological aspects of the fibrositis (fibromyalgia) syndrome. 187 56
Aspects of sleep stage evaluation and analysis of alpha and delta EEG frequencies in sleep were shown to be related to musculo-skeletal pain and mood disturbance in patients with '
fibrositis
syndrome'. Patients were treated at bedtime for 3 weeks with either chlorpromazine, 100 mg (8 patients), or L-tryptophan, 5 g (7 patients). Chlorpromazine, but not L-tryptophan, was associated with increased slow wave sleep and amelioration of pain and mood symptoms. Mean percent time/min or mean percent power/min of alpha frequency during NREM and
REM
sleep corrlated with overnight increase in pain measures, hostility, and decrease in energy. On the other hand, mean percent time/min of delta in NREM sleep was related to overnight decrease in pain and mean percent delta power/min was associated with decreased anxiety and hostility, and increased energy.
...
PMID:The relationship of alpha and delta EEG frequencies to pain and mood in 'fibrositis' patients treated with chlorpromazine and L-tryptophan. 615 93
Fibromyalgia
, also called (primary)
fibromyalgia
syndrome or
fibrositis
(syndrome), is a chronic soft tissue pain syndrome characterized by the presence of widespread musculosceletal aching, tender points at characteristic sites, fatigue, and poor sleep. The etiology of this common and painful condition is incompletely understood, non-restorative sleep, which has been correlated with an electroencephalic abnormality called alpha-delta sleep (intrusion of alpha rhythms in the non-
REM
sleep EEG), may be important. Several observations suggest that serotonin is likely to mediate both pain and non-
REM
sleep, and serotonin deficiency in the brain has been suggested to be of pathogenetic significance in
fibromyalgia
syndrome. A lower than normal threshold for pain can often be observed. The newly proposed criteria for the classification of
fibromyalgia
syndrome (widespread pain in combination with tender points at 11 or more of 18 specific tender point sites) are important for the differential diagnosis and to compare results in international studies.
...
PMID:[Fibromyalgia]. 748 45
There is a general tendency to restrict the notion of sleep disorders to insomnia and consequently to limit treatment to the prescription of hypnotics. However, it is very often of benefit to prescribe psychotropic agents, in particular antidepressants, not only in insomnia but also in certain cases of hypersomnia, parasomnia and dysomnia associated with organic diseases. In some conditions, however, antidepressants may either induce or aggravate sleep disorders. This is the case with a number of psychostimulants that occasionally induce insomnia. It is also true of the tricyclic antidepressants, which may worsen or even induce a restlessleg syndrome that is often associated with periodic movement syndrome. On the other hand, the antidepressants may play a therapeutic role in certain sleep disorders : - depression-related insomnia is of course the << primary >> indication for antidepressants. Furthermore, certain antidepressants exhibit a sedative action resulting in a hypnogenic-type effect which appears well before the antidepressant effect; - the other types of insomnia may also often be treated with antidepressants : not acute reactional insomnia, against which hypnotics are remarkably effective, but chronic insomnia. In addition, all antidepressants may eventually correct depressive hypersomnia, but in these cases, it is evidently preferable to prescribe non-sedative drugs. Although some tricyclic antidepressants have been proposed for use in hypersomnia due to sleep apnea, their therapeutic interest is minor compared with mechanical and surgical treatment. In contrast, antidepressants play an important role in the treatment of narcolepsy, particularly for the correction of attacks of cataplexy. Antidepressants have also been used for some time in the treatment of parasomnia related to slow deep sleep (night terrors and sleepwalking), but the antidepressants may also be used in enuresis and in parasomnia related to
REM
sleep : nightmares, sleep paralysis, behavioral problems associated with
REM
sleep. Antidepressant (mainly serotoninergic drugs) are often used in the treatment of fibrolitis syndrome. Finally, antidepressants (particularly the serotoninergic antidepressants) play an important role in the drug treatment of
fibromyalgia
.
...
PMID:[Use of antidepressants in sleep disorders: practical considerations]. 892 78
Polysomnographic findings were compared between a group of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS; n = 49) and a matched healthy control (HC) group (n = 20). Sleep initiation and sleep maintenance disturbances were observed in the CFS group. The percentage of stage 4 was significantly lower in the CFS group. A discriminant analysis allowed a high level of correct classification of CFS subjects and HC. Sleep-onset latency and the number of stage shifts/hour contributed significantly to the discriminant function. The presence of these anomalies as well as the decrease in stage 4 sleep were not limited to the patients also diagnosed with
fibromyalgia
or with a psychiatric disorder. No association was found between sleep disorders and the degree of functional status impairment. The mean
REM
latency and the percentage of subjects with a shortened
REM
latency were similar in CFS and HC.
...
PMID:Sleep anomalies in the chronic fatigue syndrome. A comorbidity study. 917 Jan 15
Noxious stimuli and painful disorders interfere with sleep, but disturbances in sleep also contribute to the experience of pain.Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania and possibly cluster headaches are related to
REM
sleep. Whereas headache is associated with snoring and sleep apnea, morning headaches are not specific for any primary sleep disorder. Nevertheless, the management of the sleep disorder ameliorates both morning headache and migraine.Noxious stimuli administered into muscles during slow-wave sleep (SWS) result in decreases in delta and sigma but an increase in alpha and beta EEG frequencies during sleep. Noise stimuli that disrupt SWS result in unrefreshing sleep, diffuse musculoskeletal pain, tenderness, and fatigue in normal healthy subjects. Such symptoms accompany alpha EEG sleep patterns that often occur in patients with
fibromyalgia
. The alpha EEG patterns include phasic and tonic alpha EEG sleep as well as periodic K alpha EEG sleep or frequent periodic cyclical alternating pattern. Moreover, alpha EEG sleep, as well as sleep-related breathing disorder and periodic limb movement disorder, occur in some patients with
fibromyalgia
, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. Depression and not alpha EEG sleep are features of somatoform pain disorder. Disturbances in sleep, pain behaviour and psychological distress influence return to work in workers who have suffered a soft tissue injury, e.g. low back pain. Patients with irritable bowel disorder have disturbed sleep and have increased
REM
sleep. In conclusion, there is a reciprocal relationship between sleep quality and pain. The recognition of disturbed or unrefreshing sleep influences the management of painful medical disorders.
...
PMID:Sleep and pain. 1253 Oct 4
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and
fibromyalgia
(FM) are medically unexplained conditions that share considerable overlapping symptoms, including sleep-related complaints. However, differences between the two conditions have been reported, and we hypothesized that dynamic aspects of sleep, recently attracting scientific interests, would be different in the two groups of patients. We thus study transition probabilities between sleep stages of CFS patients with or without FM. Subjects were 26 healthy controls, 14 CFS patients without FM (CFS alone) and 12 CFS patients with FM (CFS+FM) - all women. We studied transition probabilities between sleep stages (waking,
REM
sleep and Stage I, Stage II and slow-wave sleep (Stage III+IV)). We found that probabilities of transition from
REM
sleep to waking were significantly greater in CFS alone than in controls; we have reported previously this sleep disruption as the specific sleep problem for CFS alone [Kishi et al., 2008]. Probabilities of transitions from waking,
REM
sleep and Stage I to Stage II, and those from slow-wave sleep to Stage I, were significantly greater in CFS+FM than in controls; the former might indicate increased sleep pressure in CFS+FM and the latter may be the specific sleep problem of CFS+FM. These results suggest that CFS and FM are different illnesses associated with different problems of sleep regulation.
...
PMID:Sleep stage transitions in chronic fatigue syndrome patients with or without fibromyalgia. 2109 67
We present a description of the Central Sensitivity Syndrome (CSS) and some of its main components such as Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and
Fibromyalgia
. We review the changes in pain perception, describing the physiology and pathophysiology of the painful experience from the medulla horn to the CNS. We explain the theory of central sensitization as the basis to the syndrome. We refer to the differences between
fibromyalgia
and depressive disorders, is spite of their frequent presentation in comorbidity. We state the main clinical and neurobiological differences. We point out the main psychoneuroimmunoendocrinologic differences such as adrenal activity (hypoactivity vs. hyperactivity, DST hypersuppressive response vs. DST non suppression, hypersensitivity of central glucocorticoid receptors vs. desensitization of these, among others), thyroid (probable reverse T3 vs. flat stimuli TSH response curve) and growth hormone secretion (probable increase vs. disruption of normal circadian rhythm) that makes CSS resemble PTSD. We describe differential changes in sleep patterns (alpha-delta intrusion vs. altered sleep time,
REM
latency, and stage 3/4) and immunological disturbances almost opposite in each pathological entity. We finally argue which medical specialty should treat these complex syndromes.
...
PMID:[Conditions, controversies and contradictions between Central Sensitivity Syndrome and Depressive Disorders]. 2431 23
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