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Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a common, chronically painful soft tissue pain condition. The typical finding is chronic widespread pain and tenderness to palpation as a result of a generalized low pain threshold. Associated or co-morbid manifestations may include chronically dysfunctional sleep, fatigue, morning stiffness, cognitive dysfunction, depression, anxiety, recurrent headaches, dizziness, irritable bowel syndrome, and urogenital pain.
Criteria-based diagnoses of FMS can be made with confidence even in the presence of other medical conditions, such as the chronic fatigue syndrome, myofascial pain syndrome, a rheumatic disease, or a chronic infection. The 1990 American College of Rheumatology classification criteria were developed for application to research study and remain the “gold standard” for that application. These criteria have now been supplemented by the 2010 ACR FMS diagnostic criteria, which have been validated for the purpose of community medical care. Epidemiology studies indicate that FMS is present in about 2% of the general population and is much more common in women than in men, and its prevalence increases with population age. The natural history of FMS is to persist unchanged for many years and not to induce or morph into another painful condition.
Evidence from many sources supports a pathogenesis of central nervous system origin. It appears to result from additive or synergistic dysfunction in the two main central mechanisms of pain signal processing: amplified pro-nociception and subdued antinociception (descending inhibition). The underlying cause and pattern of co-morbidities may be determined by genetic predisposition, but the timing of symptom onset seems to depend on a precipitating event that may vary among affected individuals. Objective biological abnormalities that are detected in most patients include lowered thresholds to pressure-induced pain confirmed by brain imaging, imaging evidence of central dysfunction in the descending inhibition system, physiologically documented temporal summation of second pain, biochemical evidence of central sensitization, and dysfunctional sleep by polysomnography.
There is still no cure for FMS, but early efforts at therapy have documented benefits from a multidimensional paradigm that included education, physical modalities, and psychotropic/analgesic medications. More recently, medicinal treatment has increasingly been focused on pathophysiological targets. To this end, three medications with at least two different mechanisms of action have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of FMS. Strategic polypharmacy with combinations of medications, each targeting different pathological mechanisms or clinical domains, is logical and commonly applied. Rehabilitation goals include improved physical function, social adaptation, emotional balance, and better quality of life.
In the 18th century, physicians were distinguishing between articular rheumatism (now expanded to >100 arthritic diseases) and muscular rheumatism (now includes >100 soft tissue pain [STP] conditions). For more than 200 years there was confusion regarding two related muscular rheumatism concepts: painful muscle nodules and tender point sites.
The proposal by Graham that muscle cytoplasm could change from sol to gel may have led to the German term Myogelosen (muscle hardenings). In retrospect, this may have been the point in history when our current understanding of myofascial pain syndrome (MPS), characterized by palpable muscle nodules (taut bands), diverged from that of fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), which lacked them. In 1940 the American orthopedic surgeon Steindler was the first to use the term trigger point to describe body areas from which pain was referred to a zone of reference (another characteristic of MPS but not of FMS). At about the same time, Good in Britain, Kelly in Australia, and Travell in the United States noticed that pain radiating from trigger points in individual muscles followed reproducible patterns that could be used diagnostically to locate the affected muscle. Travell coined the term myofascial pain syndrome in this context.
In 1904, the British neurologist Gowers coined the term fibrositis to describe a persistent form of lumbago. Later, in 1976 Hench introduced the term fibromyalgia to emphasize STP as the main clinical feature. Smythe is recognized for his emphasis on tender points (different from the trigger points described above) in discrete locations as aids to the diagnosis of FMS. Each of these tender points was locally tender with pressure but did not refer pain as did the trigger points of MPS. In 1990, a multicenter study of patients with FMS, supervised by the American College of Rheumatology, resulted in the statistical development of research criteria for the classification of FMS (1990 ACR RCC) ( ) based on widespread pain and multiple soft tissue tender points. In 2010, the American College of Rheumatology endorsed new FMS diagnostic criteria (2010 ACR FDC), which have been validated for community clinical diagnosis and care of patients with FMS ( ).
For more information on the history of these disorders, the reader is referred to published reviews ( , , , ).
The term “muscular rheumatism” gradually gave way to the rheumatologist’s term non-articular rheumatism and more recently the newer term soft tissue pain syndromes. On clinical charts, the abbreviation STP can be used to indicate a category of endeavor in medical history taking, physical examination, and differential diagnosis. Box 48-1 provides a useful classification of STP. The main subheadings divide STP into local, regional, and generalized subcategories.
Bursitis (subacromial, olecranon, trochanteric, prepatellar, anserine)
Tenosynovitis (biceps, supraspinatus, infrapatellar, Achilles)
Enthesopathies (lateral epicondylitis, medial epicondylitis)
Myofascial pain syndrome (involving muscles of the neck, trunk, or extremities)
Myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome (involving the facial muscles)
Complex regional pain syndrome (types 1 and 2)
Referred pain from a visceral source to a musculoskeletal target
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS)
Chronic fatigue syndrome (FMS-like when widespread body pain is present)
Hypermobility syndrome
Most of the localized conditions are believed to result from repetitive mechanical injury to inadequately conditioned tissue. They were generally named anatomically and can be disclosed by a typical history plus the exquisite tenderness elicited by digital palpation of the affected structure. The regional syndromes are limited in anatomical scope to a region or body quadrant, whereas the generalized category implies a systemic process that affects the musculoskeletal system in a more global manner.
The clinician members of the American Pain Society, who regularly treat pain, were surveyed about MPS ( ). From a sample of 403 responders, 88.5% considered MPS to be a valid clinical disorder and 81% believed that it was different from FMS. In their opinion, minimal criteria for the diagnosis of MPS were a regional distribution of the symptoms and signs, the presence of trigger points, and normal findings on neurological examination.
The most comprehensive manifestation of the MPS diagnostic criteria ( ) includes each of the following:
Regional body pain and stiffness
Limited range of motion of the affected muscle
Twitch response producing a taut band
One or more trigger points
Referral (triggering) pain from a trigger point to a zone of reference
Resolution of the symptoms with anesthesia of the trigger point
Increasing evidence suggests that the underlying pathophysiology of trigger points may be a dysfunctional neuromuscular end plate ( ), but an alternative mechanism involving the muscle spindle has been proposed ( ). Perhaps both participate in a dysfunctional reflex arc process.
Because MPS can develop in almost any skeletal muscle, some clinicians have speculated that an unusually widespread case of MPS, with many trigger points, may be a developmental component of FMS with its widespread pain and tender points. Several well-documented findings argue against this hypothesis, however, as follows:
Patients with FMS do not exhibit widespread tender subcutaneous nodules in skeletal muscles.
FMS tender points do not refer pain to a zone of reference, as do MPS trigger points.
The typical, regional trigger points of MPS can coexist in a patient with the typical, widespread tender points of FMS.
The trigger points of MPS are more resistant to treatment when they occur co-morbidly in a patient with FMS than they are when MPS occurs alone.
Because many other medical conditions (rheumatoid arthritis [RA], systemic lupus, and so forth) clinically overlap with FMS, it is not standard fare to propose that RA will eventually develop into FMS or vice versa.
Table 48-1 provides a clinical comparison of MPS and FMS. The critical point is that MPS can involve a single muscle (occasionally with two or more affected muscles, seldom bilaterally) in a given region.
CLINICAL FEATURE | MYOFASCIAL PAIN | FIBROMYALGIA |
---|---|---|
Pain pattern | Local or regional | Generalized |
Least distribution | A single muscle | 11 tender points |
Muscle spasm | +++ | ++ |
Trigger points | Local, regional | Not a feature |
Tender points | Not a feature | Common, widespread |
Taut band | ++ | − |
Twitch response | ++ | − |
Referred pain | +++ | − |
Fatigue | + | ++++ |
Sleep disturbance | +++ | ++++ |
Paresthesias | Regional | Distal |
Headaches | Referred head pain | Occipital origin |
Irritable bowel | Not a feature | +++ |
Swelling sensation | + | ++ |
Before 1990, multiple criteria were used for the diagnosis of FMS. The results of a multicenter research study sanctioned by the American College of Rheumatology ( ) led to the development of uniform research criteria for the classification of FMS that were eventually called the 1990 ACR RCC. These criteria required only two simple components: a history of widespread pain for at least 3 months and painful sensitivity to 4 kg of digital pressure at 11 or more of 18 anatomically defined tender points. The criteria exhibited moderately high sensitivity (88.4%) and specificity (81.1%) for patients with FMS against healthy normal and disease control subjects with other painful conditions.
The 1990 ACR RCC dramatically aided the study of FMS during the 1990s. With widely accepted criteria, it was possible to conduct research studies on uniform patient populations recruited from diverse sites around the world. Because of the uniformity, there was reasonable certainty that study patients were comparable. It was then possible to conduct physiology, imaging, pathogenesis, and clinical therapy studies. Epidemiological studies were conducted to establish the prevalence of FMS in different countries and ethnic populations. The number of publications on FMS increased from about 15 annually to more than 100 per year ( Fig. 48-1 ). These gains were gigantic for FMS and rapidly allowed a picture of this subpopulation of chronic widespread pain to emerge that could not have been accomplished without a uniform and widely accepted research classification.
On the other hand, the 1990 ACR RCC have been criticized because they are largely subjective and involved only the pain/tenderness domain of FMS. In addition, the 1990 ACR RCC were designed and validated to select patients for FMS research studies but were never validated for community-based clinical diagnosis. Nonetheless, clinicians around the world began to use the 1990 ACR RCC to make the diagnosis of FMS on their clinic patients. Even though they were presumably making the diagnosis of FMS by the 1990 ACR RCC, many clinicians were not properly performing or interpreting the tender point examination. Some psychiatrists were unhappily excluded from making the diagnosis of FMS on that basis because the historical philosophy of their specialty did not allow them to physically touch patients, as would have been necessary to perform the tender point examination. Epidemiological studies on the prevalence of FMS were difficult to perform because a confident diagnosis required at least a sample of the patients with widespread pain to be examined for tender points. Finally, both components (history and examination) of the 1990 ACR RCC were based on the domain of pain (including the tender point examination, which was a semi-objective finding of a low pain threshold, or allodynia), but they completely ignored many typical co-morbid domains so troublesome to most FMS patients. There was clearly a need for newly validated clinical criteria that would focus on FMS co-morbid manifestations, such as sleep dysfunction, headache, cognitive insecurity, affective manifestations, fatigue, chest pain, irritable bowel, and bladder irritability.
It was on this basis that development of a new approach to the clinical diagnosis of FMS was undertaken ( ). Some had advocated discarding the 1990 ACR RCC, but the approach that was ultimately adopted was to develop the new 2010 ACR FDC while still viewing the 1990 ACR RCC as the gold standard for research study. “Gold standard” in this case meant simply that patients identified as meeting the 2010 ACR FDC were checked against those meeting the 1990 ACR RCC at an earlier time in their medical history to determine how well the two criteria agreed.
The new 2010 ACR FDC involved two components—a Widespread Pain Index (WPI) and a Somatic Symptoms Score (SSS), with nearly equal weight toward the diagnosis of FMS. The WPI was an attempt to quantify the proportion of the patient’s anatomy that was experiencing pain. Box 48-2 provides a listing of areas of the body where the existence of pain could contribute to the WPI. Each area affected increased the WPI by 1 point, with a range of possible scores of 0–19.
Ask about pain in the 19 body regions shown below (each relevant item counts as one point):
Right jaw, right upper arm, upper back, right upper leg
Left jaw, left upper arm, lower back, left upper leg
Neck, right lower arm, right hip area, right lower leg
Right shoulder girdle, left lower arm, left hip area, left lower leg
Left shoulder girdle, chest, abdomen
Three symptom domains (0–3 severity scale: none = 0, mild = 1, moderate = 2, severe = 3):
Fatigue
Dyscognition
Unrefreshing sleep
Somatic symptoms (0–3 scale: none [0–10] = 0, few [10–20] = 1, more [20–30] = 2, many [30–40] =3):
Muscle pain, irritable bowel syndrome, fatigue/tiredness, thinking or remembering problem, muscle weakness, headache, pain/cramps in abdomen, numbness/tingling, dizziness, insomnia, depression, constipation, pain in upper abdomen, nausea, nervousness, chest pain, blurred vision, fever, diarrhea, dry mouth, itching, wheezing, Raynaud’s syndrome, hives/welts, ringing in ears, vomiting, heartburn, oral ulcers, loss/change in taste, seizures, dry eyes, shortness of breath, loss of appetite, rash, sun sensitivity, hearing difficulty, easy bruising, hair loss, frequent urination, painful urination, bladder spasms
WPI ≥ 7 and SSS ≥ 5
WPI = 3–6 and SSS ≥ 9
86.2–88.1% accurate in diagnosing patients with fibromyalgia syndrome previously classified by 1990 ACR RCC ( )
Calculation: simple sum of WPI and SSS.
Confirmed diagnosis of fibromyalgia if:
WPI + SSS ≥ 13
93% accurate with sensitivity of 97% and specificity of 92%
1990 ACR RCC, 1990 American College of Rheumatology Research Classification Criteria for inclusion of fibromyalgia patients in research studies; 2010 ACR FDC, 2010 American College of Rheumatology Fibromyalgia Diagnostic Criteria.
Also shown in Table 48-2 is the methodology for quantifying the SSS on a scale from 0 to 12. It depends on the severity of three co-morbid manifestations and a review of systems. The three co-morbidities (fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, awakening still tired because of non-refreshing sleep) were each quantified as absent (0), mild (1), moderate (2), or severe (3). In addition, a list of 41 seemingly random symptoms or signs was provided to represent a review of symptoms. Their contributions to the patient’s illness behavior were categorically quantified from none (0) to many (3).
CLINICAL FEATURES AND ASSOCIATED SYMPTOMS | PREVALENCE |
---|---|
Widespread pain | 100% |
Peripheral pain generators | 70% |
Sleep disorder | 90% |
Fatigue | 80% |
Depression: point prevalence | 20–40% |
Depression: lifetime prevalence | 58–71% |
Irritable bowel syndrome | 30–50% |
Irritable bladder syndrome | 12% |
Urinary urgency | 60% |
Headache: severe muscle contraction type | Often |
Cold intolerance | Often |
Cognitive deficits | Often |
Palpitations, chest wall pain mimicking angina pectoris | Often |
Morning stiffness | Often |
Dizziness and lightheadedness | Occasional |
The 2010 ACR FDC total score is dependent on a floating combination of scores for the WPI and the SSS. For example, the diagnosis of FMS could be made with a WPI score of 7 or higher and an SSS of 5 or higher or with an WPI score of 3–6 and an SSS of 9 or higher. The accuracy of these criteria was judged to be 88.1%. They were subsequently validated for application to community clinical diagnoses of FMS in a follow-up study of 315 patients evaluated by 47 physicians.
In an abstract presented at the 2011 ACR National Scientific Meeting, Yunus reported the results from a retrospective examination of data from FMS clinic patients meeting the 1990 ACR RCC. The objective was to determine what proportion of these patients would have met the 2010 ACR FDC. Of 473 records screened, 408 (86.2%) met the 2010 ACR FDC ( ).
A self-administered questionnaire was later developed as an extension of this methodology to determine whether its use might allow the entire diagnostic database to be collected without requiring the active participation of a physician ( ). The questionnaire instrument was tested by patients participating in the National Data Bank with its analysis center in Wichita, Kansas. Participating were 729 patients with FMS, 845 with osteoarthritis (OA), 439 with systemic lupus erythematosus, and 5210 with RA. The analysis sought a simple sum of the WPI and SSS that would support the diagnosis of FMS in distinction to the other conditions studied. The cutoff value that achieved this goal was 13, which provided a diagnosis of FMS that was 93% accurate, 97% sensitive, and 92% specific. Thus, a clinical subject entering a doctor’s office can complete a questionnaire and have it scored by a trained paramedical staff member. If the sum of the derived WPI and SSS is 13 or higher, the diagnosis of FMS can be implied with a high degree of statistical accuracy. Of course, it is up to the clinician to support or not support making the diagnosis of FMS in any given patient.
The anatomical location of the tenderness at the FMS tender points is deep to the skin in soft tissue structures such as skeletal muscles, ligaments, and bursae, but there is no convincing evidence that the painful tissues are histologically abnormal. According to the 1990 ACR RCC, at least 11 of the 18 tender points must exhibit painful sensitivity to 4 kg of digital palpation pressure. This amount of pressure can be standardized against an algometer, but a reasonably accurate clinical estimate of the correct amount of pressure can be obtained by pressing the examining thumb against an unyielding surface until blood flow in the thumbnail is blanched from its tip to its midportion.
The reliability of this examination as a measure of the pain threshold can be influenced by the amount of pressure applied and by the rate at which it is applied. The amount of perceived discomfort can be accentuated and prolonged by applying the stimulus repetitively to induce wind-up. Patients will often react to palpation of a tender point by withdrawal, diffuse activation of the erector pili of the skin (cutis anserina), or spontaneous lacrimation. The resultant local aching sensation at each examined tender point may persist for days. There is no role for the use of control points to exclude psychosomatic hysterical tenderness.
In the past it was common for research studies to document the total number of tender points at which 4 kg of digital pressure induced the perception of pain in FMS patients or in healthy normal controls (HNCs). Another examination-based approach was to determine the average pain threshold by averaging the individual pain thresholds of 18 tender points with an algometer. The lower than normal pain threshold in patients with FMS meets the established definition of allodynia, so FMS could properly be viewed as the human model of “chronic widespread allodynia.”
Clinical research studies designed to establish the severity of pain experienced by FMS patients now more commonly rely on subjective measurement of pain perception with validated questionnaire instruments. A simple pain visual analog scale (PVAS) anchored on the left by the term “no pain” and on the right by the term “severe pain” has been widely used for this purpose. Graded in millimeters from 0 to 100, the PVAS is considered to indicate mild pain with a score of less than 40 mm, whereas a score of 70 mm or greater is indicative of severe pain. It is common to exclude FMS patients from therapeutic trials when they report baseline PVAS values of less than 40 mm or greater than 90 mm. Most such studies found an average PVAS value at baseline of about 60 mm, and the goal of therapy was to reduce the severity of the pain by at least 30% (~18 mm) to achieve clinically relevant improvement ( ).
FMS has been found in all ethnic groups studied to date. It is not limited to affluent or industrialized nations. With a prevalence ranging from 2% to nearly 12% in the general population, it must be viewed as a common medical condition ( ). Its prevalence increases with age, most dramatically in women, with a peak in the seventh decade (7.4%). Adult women are four to seven times more likely than adult men to be affected. By contrast, the gender distribution of childhood FMS is nearly equal, and many children outgrow their symptoms ( ). About 15% of patients seen in rheumatology clinics are classified as having FMS, whereas the prevalence of FMS is about 6% in other practice settings. The annual direct cost of care for FMS in the United States was higher than $2000 per patient in 1997 ( ). Multiplied by the 5 million FMS patients in the United States, that figure predicts an annual direct cost in excess of $10 billion.
Little is known about the incidence of FMS, but risk factors for its development include one or more forms of genetic predisposition. In that setting, initiating factors are believed to include physical trauma or a febrile illness. A study conducted in Israel showed that automobile accidents with whiplash neck injury were more likely to result in the onset of symptomatic FMS than were industrial accidents limited to fracture of a lower extremity (22% versus 2% for all subjects, >30% for female accident victims) ( ).
The clinical manifestations of FMS are usually more complex than body pain alone. Associated symptoms often require further investigation and specific management. For example, patients describe disordered sleep, fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, dizziness, headaches, psychological distress, depression, anxiety, chest pain, cold intolerance, restless legs, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and irritable bladder syndrome (see Table 48-2 ). These symptoms clearly contribute to FMS patients’ suffering experience.
Many authors have addressed the co-morbidities of FMS in their published works ( ; ; ). An important contribution to acceptance of a key clinical set of these co-morbid conditions was accomplished with the Delphi method when a clinician expert panel and a group of patients separately identified what they considered to be the most important domains ( ). The parallel lists are presented side by side in Figure 48-2 , where it is apparent that the prioritized orders of the two lists are similar.
An organization of evaluation experts in the development of outcome measurement, called OMERACT (which stands for Objective Measures of Randomized Clinical Trials), used the information from Figure 48-2 and effect sizes from responses of FMS patients to medications to design outcome assessment approaches for research study ( ). An adaptation of OMERACT’s proposed key outcome measures led to Figure 48-3 , which shows core clinical domains in the center, less critical domains in the intermediate ring, and a few remaining items in the rim. This presentation does not devalue the giant strides in the understanding of FMS made possible by neuroimaging and measurement of neurochemicals. They were marginalized in this setting because there is still much to learn about their sensitivity, specificity, and validity for FMS (more on this topic later).
One way to emphasize the types of co-morbidities that can accompany FMS is with illustrative images. Figures 48-3 and 48-4 provide illustrations that can be used by clinicians or other health care professionals to conceptualize for patients the key clinical domains of FMS and how the co-morbid conditions may interrelate.
The paragraphs to follow address in more detail the main co-morbidities of FMS, which will include the major symptom domains and a few clinical disorders that are known to exist as separate disease identities but are also found to associate with FMS at a prevalence greater than they occur in the general population. Some might say that FMS is in essence chronic widespread pain and everything else is co-morbid with the pain. By contrast with that view, the following discussion begins with the pain of FMS because it can legitimately be considered to be co-morbid with all the other manifestations of FMS.
The most prominent feature, or clinical domain, of the FMS construct is chronic widespread pain. For years, people with FMS pain have been doubted, criticized, mocked, negated, and marginalized because of their unique condition of chronic widespread pain. One of the reasons for this reaction from health care providers, family, and friends has been that pain is common in the general population, at almost any age, so people who complained frequently about pain have been considered unduly sensitive, complainers, drug dependent, or seekers of secondary gain. No one can feel another’s pain, and medical science has never had an instrument that could document or objectify the severity of the pain experienced. The pain of FMS was and probably always will be subjective. On the other hand, the quest of a century of investigators to understand FMS has contributed uniquely to the scientific understanding of pain processing in general.
Patients with FMS were found to have a biologically based low pain threshold. With this widespread low pain threshold, patients with FMS met criteria for the term allodynia . This term is defined as pain that is induced by a stimulus that would not cause pain in an HNC ( ). Since the biological phenomenon of allodynia can be localized, regional, or widespread, it has been suggested that a new, more physiological name for FMS could be “chronic widespread allodynia” ( ). Some have said that people with FMS also exhibit hyperalgesia (defined as an abnormally exuberant response to a normally painful stimulus), but that assertion is impossible to prove because the presence of allodynia means that with any graded stimulus, pain is experienced by the FMS patient during each of many advancing steps before the “normally painful stimulus” level is achieved. To use a crude example, let us say that normal people report that heat applied to their forearm is painful at 120°F, but the scientist ignores that in an experimental testing paradigm. The scientist’s protocol is to ignore the test subject’s complaints of pain and continue to increase the heat until a temperature of 240°F is achieved. Should those doing the testing be surprised if the responses of the test subjects at that point are “abnormally exuberant”? One can imagine the test subjects saying “this has been painful for some time now, get this thing off my arm.” Allodynia means that affected persons might experience pain from a normal handshake, standing on their feet, sitting in a chair, or even lying on their bed when they awaken at night and perceive pain at areas of contact with the mattress.
It is now possible to objectively document allodynia by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which was strategically applied to people with FMS ( , ). The results showed that FMS patients, as a group, did indeed experience the pain of which they complained and that it documented “objective allodynia” in these patients ( Fig. 48-5 ).
Recently, a committee of the American Academy of Pain Medicine proposed a simple, but rather intuitive new taxonomy for pain ( ). They suggested that pain which had a neurobiological basis be referred to as eudynia (nociceptive pain), Greek for “good pain,” whereas the term maldynia (maladaptive pain), Greek for “bad pain,” could be used for pain that typically occurs in the absence of ongoing noxious stimuli and does not promote healing and repair. This interesting new taxonomic approach to classifying pain is really stratified on the basis of a noxious versus a non-noxious stimulus rather than on the differential experience of the resultant pain. The exact magnitude of the stimulus that would distinguish these categories of stimuli might vary widely in different ethnic, gender, cultural, age, and diagnosis groups. This new taxonomy will be problematic for application to FMS patients, for whom the term maldynia seems to have been specifically designed. Patients with FMS cannot precisely distinguish the pain resulting from noxious versus non-noxious stimuli. For them, non-noxious and noxious stimuli are both amplified and both hurt. Therefore, they tend to react protectively to both, even when the stimulus is non-noxious and does not produce a lesion in need of healing or repair. The authors acknowledged that “the absolute clinical value of these definitions has not been established.”
More than 90% of FMS patients experience chronic insomnia. Some have difficulty falling asleep, but most do not because they are exhausted by bedtime. The major problem with sleep in FMS is awakening after only a few hours of sleep and feeling distressingly alert and unable to sleep soundly again until near morning. People with FMS typically awaken in the morning feeling painfully stiff, cognitively sluggish, and non-refreshed by their sleep. It is surprising, then, that a person with such an overwhelming sleep deficit should have so much difficulty napping during the day. Patients appreciate learning about the disordered physiology of their sleep problem. observed an electroencephalographic (EEG) pattern of sleep architecture called alpha-wave intrusions in deep, delta-wave, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, which relates to subjective fatigue and psychological distress but is not specific for FMS. About 60% of patients with FMS exhibit this anomaly, whereas its prevalence was only about 25% in HNCs, insomniacs, and dysthymics ( ). Another EEG abnormality that has been evaluated in FMS is cyclic alternating patterns ( ). Of course, patients with FMS can also exhibit obstructive sleep apnea and periodic involuntary limb movements, which should be identified by polysomnography and treated separately.
There is a fairly direct connection between sleep dysfunction and body pain. An early study by disclosed evidence that the sleep dysfunction in FMS might be involved in pathogenesis of the pain. More recently, disclosed a mechanism by which sleep dysfunction and pain might be linked through altered descending inhibition of nociception ( Fig. 48-6 ). Thirty-two healthy adult women were studied polysomnographically for 7 nights. On nights 1–2 (baseline), all the study subjects slept undisturbed for 8 hours to adapt them to the laboratory environment. On nights 3–5, the study subjects were randomized into three intervention subgroups: to normal sleep (controls), to forced awakening every hour, or to delayed bedtime but then unaltered sleep. After each of the six experimental nights, the pressure pain threshold on the left arm was tested, followed by a right arm cold pressor test and retesting of the left arm pain threshold. The forced-awakening group demonstrated a significant loss of pain inhibition and an increase in spontaneous pain, whereas neither of the other two control groups showed changes in pain inhibition or spontaneous pain. The authors concluded that repeated “sleep interruption, but not simple sleep restriction, impairs endogenous pain-inhibitory function and increases spontaneous pain.” They believed that these findings support a pathophysiological role of sleep disturbance in the development of chronic pain. Another recent study ( ), using the cold pressor test has shown that descending inhibition is impaired in FMS and that the deficiency is statistically related to the FMS patients’ dysfunctional sleep.
More than 90% of FMS patients sleep so poorly that they are chronically sleep deprived. A FMS headache will often be due to insomnia and its consequences. Polysomnography is well justified in a patient with newly diagnosed FMS to facilitate a physiological diagnosis of the cause of the insomnia. Health care professionals should advise patients on how to improve their sleep hygiene, which may require taking the television out of the bedroom, using a red nightlight to avoid interfering with nocturnal melatonin production, and arranging for an alternate sleeping environment when the patient awakens because of a partner’s loud snoring. Shift work is very poorly tolerated by people with FMS, so the physician may need to assist them in changing a work schedule that is impossible for them to maintain.
Because of the chronic insomnia, it is very common for FMS patients to abuse coffee, tea, cola drinks, or other stimulants to help them feel alert during the day. Use of a morning or daytime stimulant can produce a vicious cycle because the stimulant that is taken for poor sleep will further interfere with the subsequent night’s rest. Typically, there is a perceived need for progressive escalation of the dosage of the stimulant over time. Failure to escalate the dosage—or certainly any relative decrease in the average daily dosage of caffeine—can precipitate a withdrawal headache.
A logical, but often strategically difficult solution to daytime tiredness is to take a short nap when tired rather than to take an oral stimulant in the form of a stimulant beverage. These patients should ultimately discontinue the use of all CNS stimulants. The non-steroidal drug naproxen, 500 mg twice daily for 2–3 days, will usually attenuate the head pain of a caffeine withdrawal headache but will not eliminate the subsequent desire to resume its use. As with tobacco habituation, there is a kind of comfort associated with sipping a flavored coffee while reading or visiting a friend. These habits will gradually lose their pull if the patient is convinced that the effort is worthwhile.
In addition to the potential health risks associated with the CNS stimulant compounds themselves, one must also be aware of the massive dosages of free sugar and dairy cream that accompany such beverages. The logical alternative chosen by many patients is one of the artificial sweeteners that are used regularly in popular diet sodas. Several recent studies have evaluated the effects of drinking diet cola on body weight ( , , , ), but their findings vary or are contradictory. A 2010 meeting of the British Nutritional Foundation explored the available data and concluded that “overall the evidence suggests that, despite partial caloric compensation, beverages sweetened with intense sweeteners can contribute to weight control” ( ). Of course, plain water would be at least as safe for people with FMS as the artificially sweetened beverages and would not contain the objectionable CNS stimulants.
Headache is a particularly troublesome form of regional pain. The World Health Organization has endorsed a study that reported the worldwide prevalence of headache in the general population to be 46% with a clear preference for females ( ). Of course, headache is not a single entity, but rather a generic term encompassing many kinds of head pain with many potential causes. Tension-type headache is much more common than the other types of headache. In the referenced study it was about fourfold more common than migraine ( ).
For years it was perceived that the headache of FMS was a tension-type headache involving the muscles of the neck, particularly the trapezius muscles, which merge with ligaments that attach to the occiput. The occipital nerves exited the occipital scull and penetrated these ligaments before fanning out bilaterally over each side of the scalp. The belief was that these nerves were sufficiently compromised by chronic tension on the ligaments to cause referred scalp pain. The pain feels like a band around the head with pressure behind both eyes and bilateral aching in the area of the occiput where exquisite tenderness to palpation was found and where unilateral local injection of an anesthetic agent would attenuate or eliminate the pain on the ipsilateral side. The most effective (more than any oral medication) conservative treatment of this form of headache in FMS patients was for affected individuals to take a long hot bath or shower and then to sleep for at least 30 minutes on their back with a small soft pillow supporting the neck.
More recently, headache nomenclature changed and the FMS headache fell in the category of “chronic daily headache” because its frequency was often in excess of 15 days per month for the previous 6 months. This new classification helped clarify the frequency of the FMS headache but did not change its underlying pathogenesis, identify any other cause, or dictate any change in its management.
Many clinicians have diagnosed migraine in FMS headache sufferers, principally because of the severity of the symptoms. Symptoms can include nausea but seldom progress to emesis. The pattern can be characterized by pain with movement of the head or with certain positions, especially with bending down so that the head is dependent. It can be associated with prominent sensitivity to sound and/or light. The problem with equating these dramatic clinical features with migraine is that people with FMS are typically sensitive to physical stimuli, bright light, and loud sounds even when they do not have what they would call a headache. Since FMS is an amplifier of neurological signals, these stimuli, which would not really bother an HNC, are noxious to persons with FMS and more so when they have an FMS headache. This could be interpreted as another manifestation of allodynia (see previous discussion of widespread pain above).
Features of an FMS headache that help distinguish it from migraine are the lack of a prodromal aura, lack of visual loss, lack of unilaterality, and lack of speech or language dysfunction in a postdrome. A possibly untoward consequence of identifying a FMS headache as migraine is that the typical response of health care providers to migraine is to treat it with a serotoninergic (triptan) medication. This class of medication might be helpful for the headache, but it might also induce the potentially lethal hyperserotonin syndrome in patients made more susceptible by their concomitant therapy with a drug such as a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) or, more likely, one of the serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) medications currently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of FMS pain.
If clinicians must consider a FMS headache diagnostically, differentially, and therapeutically, what factors should enter into their deliberations? It is clear that many forms of headache in adults can be induced by insomnia, by a variety of medications taken for other conditions, by dietary central nervous system (CNS) stimulants, by presbyopia, by giant cell arteritis, by MPS, by a variant of MPS involving the muscles of mastication in temporomandibular pain syndrome, or by allergy/infection-induced sinusitis. Depending on the differential diagnostic and manual medicinal skills of the primary care physician, it may be important to involve a variety of specialties in diagnosing and treating a patient with persistent, intractable FMS headache. The consultant list might include sleep physiology; neurology; physical medicine; ophthalmology; ear, nose, and throat; rheumatology; and dentistry.
The morning stiffness experienced by most FMS patients is remarkable because it is so severe and lasts so long. The typical stiffness of patients with inflammatory RA is 30 minutes to 2 hours, whereas that of OA is usually 5–15 minutes. By comparison, the stiffness of FMS patients is typically 45 minutes to 4 hours. The best clinical correlate with morning stiffness in FMS is pain, so patients may not be clearly distinguishing these seemingly different symptoms. Biochemically, the stiffness of RA correlates with the change in serum concentration of hyaluronic acid from early morning to noon in active individuals ( ). The same finding has been observed in FMS patients, thus suggesting that the biological association relevant to morning stiffness in both conditions may be the serum level of hyaluronic acid rather than inflammation.
About 80% of FMS patients complain of fatigue, and a subgroup meets the new criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The fatigue of CFS (a feeling of antimotivational exhausted weakness) is qualitatively and quantitatively different from that of FMS (a heavy feeling of tiredness). The differential diagnosis of fatigue is difficult because it must include a variety of sleep disorders, chronic infections, autoimmune disorders, psychiatric co-morbidities, and neoplasia. Fatigue may also result from sedating medication used to treat the insomnia of FMS, such as tricyclic antidepressant drugs.
Patients with FMS frequently complain about diminished cognitive function. This symptom ranges from difficulty concentrating when reading a book to short-term memory deficits. A research study suggested that FMS patients perform poorly on a range of cognitive tasks ( ), but evidence of abnormality is more apparent in the face of distraction or during multitasking experiments. Causes of cognitive dysfunction could include chronic pain, medications taken to control pain or sleep dysfunction, chronic loss of restorative sleep, or affective disturbances, but it cannot help to be rapidly losing brain cortical volume (see loss of gray matter, later).
Before FMS was better understood as a condition of central sensitization, patients with this condition were often suspected of having hypochondriasis, health-related phobia, or a mood disorder. There is a subgroup of FMS with associated depression or anxiety, but it is unlikely that an affective disorder is the cause of FMS. Indeed, two objective distinctions between FMS and major depression are that minor elevations of cerebrospinal fluid substance P levels in depression may be spurious ( ) and that patients with depression exhibit normal descending inhibition in response to the cold pressor test while that response is markedly impaired in FMS ( ). It is also interesting that the somatic manifestations of FMS are on a different statistical track than the psychiatric manifestations ( , ). The do not correlate with each other. The prevalence of depression in FMS at any point in time was reported to be 22% or 34%, utilizing different methodologies ( , ). If less than 40% of FMS patients were depressed at the time of diagnosis of FMS, more than 60% were not depressed. Depression also occurs with RA (20–30%), cancer, and other chronic conditions (14–33%), where the depression is considered to be an understandable consequence of the pain and physical limitation imposed by the underlying disease. The same is apparently true for FMS. It has been argued that FMS patients who have sought medical treatment are more likely to exhibit symptoms of depression than are those in the community who have not sought medical care ( ). Sexual abuse in childhood is no longer a viable hypothesis for the etiology of FMS ( ).
evaluated 78 FMS probands and 40 RA probands. These index cases led the investigators to 146 family members of the FMS probands and 72 family members of the RA probands. In both groups of families combined, the investigators found a total of 30 fibromyalgia patients. All of the FMS and non-FMS family members were subjected to psychiatric interviews to look for a lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorders. The odds ratios (ORs) for people with FMS versus people without FMS to have exhibited a psychiatric disorder were as follows: bipolar disorder, OR = 153; major depression, OR = 2.7; any anxiety disorder (panic, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive–compulsive disorder, social phobias), OR = 6.7; an eating disorder (anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa), OR = 2.4; and a substance use disorder (no specific substance), OR = 3.3 (not associated with family members not affected by FMS).
The authors commented on the unexpectedly high prevalence of bipolar disorder and noted that this co-morbidity raised concern about the use of antidepressant medications, which could precipitate hypomanic, manic, or mixed reaction disorder in predisposed individuals, even though the bipolar condition had previously been latent. It clearly is important to identify bipolar disorder when it accompanies FMS because its presence would contraindicate the use of all antidepressant medications and even the SNRIs that are approved by the FDA for the treatment of FMS.
In the majority of the same authors’ co-morbid cases, the associated psychiatric disorders developed more than 1 year before the FMS became apparent. This observation raises the issue of selection bias in this study because the sources of the patients were the practices of several psychiatrists who would be involved in the care of patients with psychiatric disorders. They extensively address the issue of selection bias in their discussion and tried to discount it. Nonetheless, the high prevalence of bipolar disorder alone would strengthen the argument in favor of selection bias. The authors countered by proposing that fibromyalgia and certain psychiatric disorders may share pathophysiological links that might predispose them to the development of both types of conditions. The authors did not favor the development of FMS from psychiatric disorders or the reverse.
The frequency with which MPS is found in people with FMS depends on the criteria used and the examiner’s skill in finding trigger points. In part, the problem is that no clinical criteria are universally accepted for the diagnosis of MPS, as have existed for FMS over the past 20 years ( , , ). According to one skilled examiner, 72% of patients with FMS also have at least one active trigger point to suggest co-morbid MPS ( ). Another systematic screening of FMS patients for the signs and symptoms of MPS disclosed only 28% to have co-morbid MPS ( ). An unfortunate choice of FMS patients with co-morbid MPS as study subjects in one seminal study of the physiology of MPS further complicated the contemporary distinction between MPS and FMS ( ), but the same findings of spontaneous electrical activity disclosed by that study have been documented in the trigger points of MPS patients unassociated with FMS ( ). Clearly, there is overlap between FMS and MPS, but no convincing evidence suggests that a malignant spread of trigger points until they are widespread would adequately explain the development of FMS.
There is some intriguing objective data regarding the pathogenesis of MPS. Ultrasound imaging techniques have been used to distinguish the trigger points of MPS from normal tissue lacking trigger points ( ) ( Fig. 48-7 ). Adaptations of this methodology have enabled investigators to not only visualize the stiffened muscular tissue in the trigger point but also to show that the affected muscle tissue resists blood flow into it ( ). Other studies from the same group have used microdialysis to demonstrate that the microenvironment of the trigger point is more acidic (think ischemic with release of lactic acid from anaerobic glycolysis) than normal tissue. In addition, it contains increased concentrations of inflammatory and neuroactive chemicals, such as bradykinin, calcitonin gene–related peptide, substance P, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β, serotonin, and norepinephrine ( ). It has been proposed that these changes result from local muscle ischemia, which prompts local release of inflammatory substances that may sensitize muscle nociceptors ( , ) ( Fig. 48-8 ).
Treatment of the symptoms of MPS focuses on eliminating the trigger point through local cold spray, needling with or without local anesthesia and ultrasound guidance, muscle conditioning, and posture training ( , ).
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