Brain Scans Show Increased Pain Sensitivity in Fibromyalgia Article 17 P

From: KathFindlay (klfindlay@adhesions.org.uk)
Thu Nov 22 19:36:57 2001


Brain Scans Show Increased Pain Sensitivity in Fibromyalgia Article 17 P ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------- SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters Health) Nov 16 - Brain scans have revealed that women with fibromyalgia differ from depressed women in their sensitivity to pain, researchers reported here on Wednesday at the American College of Rheumatology's annual meeting.

Because nearly half of fibromyalgia patients have had clinical depression at some point in their lives, some doctors consider the condition to be a physical manifestation of an underlying mood disorder, said Dr. Leanne R. Cianfrini, a psychology researcher at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

"Because fibromyalgia doesn't have a clear-cut etiology, it leads many rheumatologists to interpret their pain as a simple physical manifestation of an underlying depression," she said. "This can be frustrating and counterproductive to patients."

To see if there are physiological differences between patients with fibromyalgia and patients with depression, the investigators compared pain thresholds and brain activity among 21 women with fibromyalgia, 8 women with depression and 22 healthy women.

Dr. Cianfrini and colleagues administered pressure calculated to be a level above each woman's pain threshold to three points on the women's bodies. The women were asked to evaluate their pain levels. The researchers also used brain imaging to measure blood flow during reports of pain.

The investigators found that the women with fibromyalgia had lower pain thresholds and reported more pain after pressure stimulation than the healthy women. The fibromyalgia patients also showed greater activation of brain structures that process pain.

The pain threshold and experience of pain among the depressed women was similar to that of the healthy women, the study found.

"We can't deny depression is associated with fibromyalgia, and it may exacerbate it," Dr. Cianfrini said. "But depression does not seem to be a necessary factor."

In a similar study, Dr. Richard H. Gracely, a research psychologist at the National Institutes of Health, presented findings on how the brains of fibromyalgia patients react to pain.

Dr. Gracely and colleagues used functional MRI to compare fibromyalgia patients with healthy patients experiencing pain. The research team found that patients with fibromyalgia who were given relatively low levels of pressure seemed to experience the same amount of pain and subsequent brain activity as healthy people experiencing high levels of induced pain.

"One of the big issues of pain patients is credibility — they don't have the luxury of physical signs; nobody believes they have what they say," Dr. Gracely said. However, these findings provide physical evidence to confirm what fibromyalgia patients report, he added.

\\\\ ( o o) ---------ooo-----(_)-----ooo---------- In Friendship Kath Findlay The UK Adhesion Society kath.findlay@adhesions.org.uk http://www.adhesions.org.uk ----------000----------000------------


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