|
Maintenance done July 10, 2001
Pain 1998 Aug;77(2):151-61 Menstrual cycle modulation of tender
points. Hapidou EG, Rollman GB Chronic Pain Management Program, Chedoke Rehabilitation
Services, Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation, Ontario, Canada.
hapidou@fhs.csu.mcmaster.ca Changes in pain sensitivity throughout the
menstrual cycle were assessed in 36 normally menstruating women and 30 users of oral
contraceptives. Pain sensitivity was measured with palpation of rheumatological tender
points and with pressure dolorimetry. The number of tender points identified by palpation
was greater in the follicular (postmenstrual) phase of the cycle as compared to the luteal
(intermenstrual) phase in normally cycling women but not in users of oral contraceptives.
These findings are related to previously described physiological and psychological
features of the menstrual cycle, with particular emphasis on the role of hormonal events
in modulating pain perception, particularly in musculoskeletal disorders such as
fibromyalgia. PMID: 9766833, UI: 98438223
Clin J Pain 1998 Sep;14(3):232-8 Comparison of integrated group
therapy and group relaxation training for fibromyalgia. Keel PJ, Bodoky C, Gerhard U,
Muller W University Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic, Basel, Switzerland. OBJECTIVE:
The efficacy of an integrated, psychological treatment program was tested in a controlled
study involving 27 patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain (fibromyalgia). DESIGN: The
experimental treatment program consisted of instruction in various self-help techniques
(e.g., cognitive behavioral strategies, relaxation, physical exercises) as well as
information on chronic pain. Control groups were instructed only in autogenic training.
Measures of pain, daily activities, general symptoms, and psychological functioning were
assessed before and after treatment, as well as at 4 months after termination of therapy
(follow-up). RESULTS: At the end of treatment, 7 patients from the experimental group and
2 from the control group showed significant clinical improvement in 3 of 6 parameters
(NS). At follow-up, the improvement was still present in 5 experimental cases but in none
of the controls (p = 0.024). Successful patients had been sick for a shorter period of
time and were less impaired by their condition. CONCLUSIONS: Psychological interventions
in combination with physiotherapy can be effective in treating fibromyalgia patients,
especially if applied early. PMID: 9758073, UI: 98429040
JAMA 1998 Sep 23-30;280(12):1061-6 Low-dose hydrocortisone for
treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome: a randomized controlled trial. McKenzie R, O'Fallon
A, Dale J, Demitrack M, Sharma G, Deloria M, Garcia-Borreguero D, Blackwelder W, Straus SE
Laboratory of Clinical Investigation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1888, USA. CONTEXT:
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is associated with a dysregulated hypothalamic-pituitary
adrenal axis and hypocortisolemia. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of
low-dose oral hydrocortisone as a treatment for CFS. DESIGN: A randomized,
placebo-controlled, double-blind therapeutic trial, conducted between 1992 and 1996.
SETTING: A single-center study in a tertiary care research institution. PATIENTS: A total
of 56 women and 14 men aged 18 to 55 years who met the 1988 Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention case criteria for CFS and who withheld concomitant treatment with other
medications. INTERVENTION: Oral hydrocortisone, 13 mg/m2 of body surface area every
morning and 3 mg/m2 every afternoon, or placebo, for approximately 12 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME
MEASURES: A global Wellness scale and other self-rating instruments were completed
repeatedly before and during treatment. Resting and cosyntropin-stimulated cortisol levels
were obtained before and at the end of treatment. Patients recorded adverse effects on a
checklist. RESULTS: The number of patients showing improvement on the Wellness scale was
19 (54.3%) of 35 placebo recipients vs 20 (66.7%) of 30 hydrocortisone recipients (P
=.31). Hydrocortisone recipients had a greater improvement in mean Wellness score (6.3 vs
1.7 points; P=.06), a greater percentage (53% vs 29%; P=.04) recording an improvement of 5
or more points in Wellness score, and a higher average improvement in Wellness score on
more days than did placebo recipients (P<.001). Statistical evidence of improvement was
not seen with other self-rating scales. Although adverse symptoms reported by patients
taking hydrocortisone were mild, suppression of adrenal glucocorticoid responsiveness was
documented in 12 patients who received it vs none in the placebo group (P<.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Although hydrocortisone treatment was associated with some improvement in
symptoms of CFS, the degree of adrenal suppression precludes its practical use for CFS.
Publication Types: Clinical trial Randomized controlled trial PMID: 9757853, UI: 98428820
CMAJ 1998 Sep 8;159(5):533-4 Chronic fatigue syndrome get court's nod of approval as
legitimate disorder. Capen K Lawyer Karen Capen looks at the implications
of a recent Alberta court case involving chronic fatigue syndrome. She thinks Canada's
physicians should pay close attention to this precedent-setting case. PMID: 9757183, UI: 98429734
Arthritis Rheum 1998 Sep;41(9):1689-94 Immunohistochemical and
molecular studies of serotonin, substance P, galanin, pituitary adenylyl
cyclase-activating polypeptide, and secretoneurin in fibromyalgic muscle tissue. Sprott H,
Bradley LA, Oh SJ, Wintersberger W, Alarcon GS, Mussell HG, Tseng A, Gay RE, Gay S
Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, Germany. OBJECTIVE: Because former
investigations have reported abnormal changes in the expression of serotonin
(5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) and substance P (SP) in serum and cerebrospinal fluid, this
study sought to determine whether 5-HT and pain-modulating neuropeptides (SP, galanin
[GA], pituitary adenylyl cyclase-activating polypeptide, and secretoneurin) were expressed
abnormally in the muscle tissue of patients with fibromyalgia (FM). METHODS: Snap-frozen
muscle tissue specimens (deltoid muscles) from 10 patients with FM (mean disease duration
15 years) and from 10 healthy control subjects were examined by reverse
transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of RNA preparations from muscle cells,
and by immunohistochemistry methods (alkaline phosphatase-anti-alkaline phosphatase and
immunogold-silver) using specific primers as well as antibodies. When specific messenger
RNA (mRNA) was detected by RT-PCR, in situ RT-PCR was performed for mRNA localization.
RESULTS: Specific mRNA for the examined substances was absent in 9 of 10 FM patients and
in 10 of 10 controls. No differences between the FM patients and controls could be
detected in the muscle tissue by immunohistochemistry. In 1 FM patient, mRNA for the GA
receptor could be shown. CONCLUSION: This study showed that 5-HT and neuropeptides are not
produced in the muscle of patients with FM, and therefore do not appear to be involved in
the peripheral induction of pain in this chronic, painful disorder. PMID: 9751103, UI:
98421723
Sb Lek 1998;99(1):53-61 [No title available]. [Article in Czech]
Vilikus Z, Mareckova H, Janatkova I, Krystufkova O, Barackova M, Boudova L, Brandejsky P,
Fucikova T Ustav telovychovneho lekarstvi a Ustav klinicke imunologie 1. lekarske fakulty
Univerzity Karlovy, Praha, Czech Republic. zdenek vilikus@medicom.cz Risk
factors of coronary artery disease (CAD) between a group of patients suffering of chronic
fatigue syndrome (CFS) and a control group of healthy persons (whose exercise activity was
not health-limited) were compared. Thirty three patients (27 women, 6 men, average age
39.9 +/- 11.7 years) and the same number of controls matched in age (39.8 +/- 10.3 years),
gender and body weight. The Minnesota Questionnaire (by Taylor) and the Compendium of
Physical Activities (by Ainsworth) were used to estimate total energetic expenditure in
exercise activity as well as in job. The risk factors of CAD in the patients with CFS were
not higher than in the control group. Aerobic physical fitness, basic anthropometric data,
blood pressure, spectrum of blood lipoproteins, blood uric acid and smoking habits were
not different between the compared groups. Patients suffering from CFS had lower total
energetic expenditure in exercise activity. Nevertheless, this significant difference in
sports activity was not large enough to cause any difference in risk factors of CAD
between the CFS patients and the control group. PMID: 9748798, UI: 98420622
Curr Opin Rheumatol 1998 Sep;10(5):446-56 Evolving concepts of diagnosis, pathogenesis,
and therapy of Sjogren's syndrome. Fox RI, Tornwall J, Maruyama T, Stern M Division of
Rheumatology, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA. Differences in diagnostic criteria for Sjogren's Syndrome (SS) have led to
confusion in the research literature and in clinical practice. A particular challenge is
the clinical diagnosis of the patients with sicca symptoms, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue,
vague cognitive defects, and a low titer antinuclear antibody. Until recently, many of
these patients would have been classified as primary SS using the European criteria. A
suggested revision of the European criteria will require inclusion of anti SS-A antibody
or characteristic minor salivary gland biopsy, leading to greater agreement between
European and San Diego criteria. Recent studies have emphasized that lacrimal and salivary
gland flow involves an entire "functioal" unit that includes the mucosal surface
(the site of inflammation), efferent nerve signals sent to the midbrain (lacrimatory and
salvatory nucleus), efferent neural signals from the brain, and acinal/ductal structures
in the gland. Thus, symptoms of dryness or pain can result from interferences with any
part of this functional unit. The initiating antigens in SS remain unknown, but immune
reactivity against SS-A, SS-B, fodrin, alpha amylase, and carbonic anhydrase have been
demonstrated in patients with established disease. The inflammatory process in the gland
releases metalloproteinases that alter the relationship of epithelial cells to their
matrix, an interaction that is necessary for glandular function and survival. Therapies
for SS remain inadequate. In SS patients with immune-mediated extraglandular manifestation
(ie, lung, kidney, skin, nerve), the therapeutic approach his similar to systemic lupus
erythematosus, although these therapies have relatively little effect on tear or saliva
flow. PMID: 9746861, UI: 98418998
J Int Neuropsychol Soc 1998 Sep;4(5):456-66 Attention and verbal learning in patients
with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Michiels V, Cluydts R, Fischler B Department of Psychology,
Free University of Brussels, Belgium. vmichiel@vub.ac.be Former neuropsychological studies with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) patients
evaluated a broad range of cognitive functions. Several, but not all, reported subtle
attentional and memory impairments suggesting possible mild cerebral involvement. In this
study, a battery of attentional tests and a verbal memory task were administered to 20 CFS
patients and 22 healthy controls (HC) in order to clarify the specific nature of attention
and memory impairment in these patients. The results provide evidence for attentional
dysfunction in patients with CFS as compared to HC. CFS patients performed more poorly on
a span test measuring attentional capacity and working memory. Speeded attentional tasks
with a more complex element of memory scanning and divided attention seem to be a
sensitive measure of reduced attentional capacity in these patients. Focused attention,
defined as the ability to attend to a single stimulus while ignoring irrelevant stimuli,
appears not to be impaired. CFS patients were poorer on recall of verbal information
across learning trials, and poor performance on delayed recall may be due to poor initial
learning and not only to a retrieval failure. PMID: 9745235, UI: 98417756
Med Sci Sports Exerc 1998 Sep;30(9):1345-8 The case history of an
elite ultra-endurance cyclist who developed chronic fatigue syndrome. Rowbottom DG, Keast
D, Green S, Kakulas B, Morton AR Department of Human Movement, University of Western
Australia, Nedlands, Australia. An elite ultra-endurance athlete, who had
previously undergone physiological and performance testing, developed chronic fatigue
syndrome (CFS). An incremental cycling exercise test conducted while he was suffering from
CFS indicated decreases in maximum workload achieved (Wmax; -11.3%), the maximum oxygen
uptake (VO2max; -12.5%), and the anaerobic threshold (AT; -14.3%) compared to pre-CFS
data. A third test conducted after the athlete had shown indications of significant
improvement in his clinical condition revealed further decreases in Wmax (-7.9%), VO2max
(-10.2%) and AT (-8.3%). These data, along with submaximal exercise data and muscle biopsy
electron microscopic analyses, suggest that the performance decrements were the result of
detraining, rather than an impairment of aerobic metabolism due to CFS per se. These data
may be indicative of central, possibly neurological, factors influencing fatigue
perception in CFS sufferers. PMID: 9741601, UI: 98412632
Compr Ther 1998 Aug;24(8):357-63 Chronic fatigue syndrome: Its cause and a strategy for
management. McCluskey DR Queens University of Belfast, Royal Victoria Hospital, Ireland. This article describes the features of chronic fatigue
syndrome and, by analysis of the many clinical paradoxes which it manifests, attempts to
give a unifying explanation of the cause of the disorder and a strategy for management.
PMID: 9740980, UI: 98413414
J Med Assoc Thai 1998 Sep;81(9):717-21 Pentazocine-induced fibrous myopathy and
localized neuropathy. Sinsawaiwong S, Phanthumchinda K Department of Medicine, Faculty of
Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand. A 47 year-old woman who had a 4-year history of intramuscular pentazocine
injections in the lower extremities, developed gradual stiffness and weakness of the lower
extremities. The thigh and buttock muscles were "wooden-hard" on palpation. The
skin was hard, shiny and hairless. Associated clinical and electrophysiological
polyradiculopathy and multiple mononeuropathy of the lower extremities were observed.
Imaging studies showed calcification and fibrosis of the involved muscles. Muscle biopsy
revealed fibrous myopathy. Caution in longterm usage and early recognition of pentazocine
toxicity as a neuromuscular complication are important in order to prevent irreversible
drug-induced fibrous myopathy and localized neuropathy. PMID: 9737132, UI: 98408345
Altern Med Rev 1998 Aug;3(4):271-80 5-Hydroxytryptophan: a
clinically-effective serotonin precursor. Birdsall TC 73541.2166@compuserve.com 5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) is the intermediate metabolite of the essential amino
acid L-tryptophan (LT) in the biosynthesis of serotonin. Intestinal absorption of 5-HTP
does not require the presence of a transport molecule, and is not affected by the presence
of other amino acids; therefore it may be taken with meals without reducing its
effectiveness. Unlike LT, 5-HTP cannot be shunted into niacin or protein production.
Therapeutic use of 5-HTP bypasses the conversion of LT into 5-HTP by the enzyme tryptophan
hydroxylase, which is the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of serotonin. 5-HTP is well
absorbed from an oral dose, with about 70 percent ending up in the bloodstream. It easily
crosses the blood-brain barrier and effectively increases central nervous system (CNS)
synthesis of serotonin. In the CNS, serotonin levels have been implicated in the
regulation of sleep, depression, anxiety, aggression, appetite, temperature, sexual
behaviour, and pain sensation. Therapeutic administration of 5-HTP has been shown to be
effective in treating a wide variety of conditions, including depression, fibromyalgia,
binge eating associated with obesity, chronic headaches, and insomnia. Publication Types:
Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9727088, UI: 98404751
J Allergy Clin Immunol 1998 Aug;102(2):222-30 Chronic fatigue syndrome: identification
of distinct subgroups on the basis of allergy and psychologic variables. Borish L,
Schmaling K, DiClementi JD, Streib J, Negri J, Jones JF Department of Medicine, National
Jewish Medical and Research Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver
80206, USA. BACKGROUND: We investigated a
role for allergic inflammation and psychologic parameters in the development of chronic
fatigue syndrome (CFS). METHODS: The design was a comparison between subjects with CFS and
age- and sex-matched control cohorts. Studies were performed on CFS subjects (n = 18) and
control cohorts consisting of normal subjects (n = 11), allergic subjects (n = 14), and
individuals with primary depression (n = 12). We quantified cytokines at baseline as
cell-associated immunoreactive peptides and as transcripts evaluated by means of
semiquantitative RNA-based polymerase chain reactions. Psychologic evaluations included
administration of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, the Structured Clinical Interview,
and the Symptom Checklist 90-Revised. RESULTS: Increases in tumor necrosis factor
(TNF)-alpha were identified in individual subjects with CFS (50.1 +/- 14.4 pg TNF-alpha
per 10(7) peripheral blood mononuclear cells [PBMCs]; mean +/- SEM) and allergic subjects
(41.6 +/- 7.6) in comparison with normal subjects (13.1 +/- 8.8) (P < .01 and P <
.05, respectively). Similar trends were observed for interferon (IFN)-alpha in allergic
subjects (3.0 +/- 1.7 pg/10(7) PBMCs) and subjects with CFS (6.4 +/- 3.4) compared with
normal subjects (1.9 +/- 1.4). A significant increase (P < .05) in TNF-alpha
transcripts was demonstrated between subjects with CFS and depressed subjects. In contrast
to these proinflammatory cytokines, both subjects with CFS (2.6 +/- 1.8 pg/10(7) PBMCs)
and allergic subjects (3.4 +/- 2.8) were associated with a statistically significant (P
< .01) decrease in IL-10 concentrations compared with normal subjects (60.2 +/- 18.2).
As shown in other studies, most of our subjects with CFS were allergic (15 of 18) and
therefore presumably demonstrated cytokine gene activation on that basis. The seasonal
exacerbation of allergy was associated with a further increase in cellular IFN-alpha (from
2.1 +/- 1.2 to 14.2 +/- 4.5 pg/107 PBMCs; P < .05) but no further modulation of
TNF-alpha or IL-10. Similarly, self-reported exacerbations of CFS were associated with a
further increase in IFN-alpha (from 2.5 +/- 1.0 to 21.9 +/- 7.8; P < .05) and occurred
at times of seasonal exposures to allergens. This linkage does not permit making any
definitive conclusions regarding a causative influence of either seasonal allergies or the
increase in cellular IFN-alpha with the increase in CFS symptoms. The close association
between atopy and CFS led us to speculate that CFS may arise from an abnormal psychologic
response to the disordered expression of these proinflammatory and antiinflammatory
cytokines. Psychologic variables were predictive of immune status within the CFS sample
(65.9% of the variance in immune status; F (3,10) = 6.44, P < .05). Specifically, the
absence of a personality disorder but greater endorsement of global psychiatric symptoms
was predictive of immune activation. CONCLUSIONS: Most of our subjects with CFS were
allergic, and the CFS and allergy cohorts were similar in terms of their immune status.
However, the CFS subjects could be discriminated by the distinct psychologic profiles
among subjects with and without immune activation. We propose that in at least a large
subgroup of subjects with CFS who had allergies, the concomitant influences of immune
activation brought on by allergic inflammation in an individual with the appropriate
psychologic profile may interact to produce the symptoms of CFS. In a psychologically
predisposed individual, symptoms associated with allergic inflammation are recognized as
illness. PMID: 9723665, UI: 98389058
Psychol Med 1998 Jul;28(4):957-65 Lower serum activity of prolyl endopeptidase in
fibromyalgia is related to severity of depressive symptoms and pressure hyperalgesia. Maes
M, Libbrecht I, Van Hunsel F, Lin AH, Bonaccorso S, Goossens F, De Meester I, De Clerck L,
Biondi M, Scharpe S, Janca A Department of Medical Biochemistry, University of Antwerp,
Belgium. BACKGROUND: The aims of the present study
were to examine serum activities of peptidases, i.e. prolyl endopeptidase (PEP) and
dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV), in patients with fibromyalgia and to examine the effects
of subchronic treatment with sertraline on these variables. METHOD: Serum PEP and DPP IV
activity were measured in 28 normal volunteers and 21 fibromyalgia patients, classified
according to the American College of Rheumatology criteria. Tenderness at tender points
was evaluated by means of dolorimetry. Fibromyalgia patients had repeated measurements of
serum PEP and DPP IV both before and after repeated administration of sertraline or
placebo for 12 weeks. RESULTS: Patients with fibromyalgia had significantly lower serum
PEP activity than normal volunteers. There were significantly negative correlations
between serum PEP activity and severity of pressure hyperalgesia and the non-somatic,
cognitive symptoms of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Fibromyalgia patients with
severe pressure hyperalgesia had significantly lower PEP activity than normal controls and
fibromyalgia patients with less severe hyperalgesia. Fibromyalgia patients with severe
non-somatic depressive symptoms had significantly lower serum PEP activity than normal
volunteers. There were no significant changes in serum DPP IV activity in fibromyalgia.
There were no significant effects of repeated administration of sertraline on serum PEP
and DPP IV activity in patients with fibromyalgia. CONCLUSIONS: The results show that
fibromyalgia, and aberrant pain perception and depressive symptoms in fibromyalgia are
related to lower serum PEP activity. It is hypothesized that lower serum PEP activity may
play a role in the biophysiology of fibromyalgia through diminished inactivation of
algesic and depression-related peptides. PMID: 9723150, UI: 98390592
Int J Sports Med 1998 Jul;19 Suppl 3:S205-9; discussion S209-11 Future directions in
exercise and immunology: regulation and integration. Mackinnon LT Department of Human
Movement Studies, The University of Queensland, Australia. Although it is difficult to predict future directions in a rapidly expanding
field such as exercise immunology, recently published research along with that presented
at this Symposium allow us to ask some key questions which may point to new directions: 1)
Are athletes immunocompromised? Athletes are not clinically immunodeficient, yet endurance
athletes are at increased risk of illness. Long-term prospective studies are needed to
understand the relationship between infection, training variables and immune parameters.
2) Is downregulation of nonspecific immunity beneficial or harmful? In athletes,
neutrophils appear to be downregulated, and this may alter resistance to illness.
Alternatively, neutrophils are mediators of tissue damage during inflammation.
Downregulation of neutrophil function may be protective by limiting chronic inflammation.
In athletes, mild immunosuppression may reflect a compromise between the body's attempts
to limit inflammation while maintaining immune function. 3) What mediates communication
between events in skeletal muscle and the immune system? Leukocyte mobility is affected by
metabolic and mechanical factors during exercise. Exercise increases cytokine levels in
damaged skeletal muscle and expression of adhesion molecules. Future work is likely to
focus on the role of cytokines and adhesion molecules in mediating exercise-induced
changes in leukocyte mobility. 4) Can exercise training provide a
"countermeasure" against immunosuppressive events? Moderate exercise training
may have a role in stimulating the immune system during certain diseases (e.g.,
HIV-infection), immune dysfunction (e.g., chronic fatigue syndrome) or reduced
responsiveness (e.g. aging, spaceflight). It is also likely that future study will apply
molecular biology techniques to further identify mechanisms by which exercise influences
immune function. PMID: 9722286, UI: 98387741
J Psychosom Res 1998 Jul;45(1 Spec No):85-91 Sleep abnormalities
demonstrated by home polysomnography in teenagers with chronic fatigue syndrome. Stores G,
Fry A, Crawford C University Section, Park Hospital for Children, Oxford, UK. To provide objective information about sleep physiology in young people with
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), home polysomnography (PSG) was performed on 18 teenagers,
aged 11-17 years, in whom CFS had been diagnosed according to internationally accepted
criteria. The results were compared with those for healthy controls matched individually
for gender and age. Compared with controls, CFS subjects showed significantly higher
levels of sleep disruption by both brief and longer awakenings. Disruption of sleep in
this way could at least contribute to the daytime symptoms of young people with CFS. The
underlying cause of the disruption needs to be considered in each individual case. Further
research is required to clarify the relative contribution of this neurobiological aspect
of CFS in young people. PMID: 9720858, UI: 98385812
J Psychosom Res 1998 Jul;45(1 Spec No):77-83 Illness beliefs and
treatment outcome in chronic fatigue syndrome. Deale A, Chalder T, Wessely S Department of
Psychological Medicine, Kings College Hospital, and Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK. Longitudinal studies have shown that physical illness attributions are associated
with poor prognosis in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Speculation exists over whether
such attributions influence treatment outcome. This study reports the effect of illness
beliefs on outcome in a randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavior therapy versus
relaxation. Causal attributions and beliefs about exercise, activity, and rest were
recorded before and after treatment in 60 CFS patients recruited to the trial. Physical
illness attributions were widespread, did not change with treatment, and were not
associated with poor outcome in either the cognitive-behavior therapy group or the control
group. Beliefs about avoidance of exercise and activity changed in the cognitive behavior
therapy group, but not in the control group. This change was associated with improved
outcome. These findings suggest that physical illness attributions are less important in
determining outcome (at least in treatment studies) than has been previously thought. In
this study, good outcome is associated with change in avoidance behavior, and related
beliefs, rather than causal attributions. PMID: 9720857, UI: 98385811
J Psychosom Res 1998 Jul;45(1 Spec No):67-76 Longitudinal changes associated with
improvement in chronic fatigue patients. Russo J, Katon W, Clark M, Kith P, Sintay M,
Buchwald D Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Harborview Medical Center,
University of Washington, Seattle 98104, USA. jerusso@u.washington.edu Tertiary
care patients with chronic fatigue were followed for 2.5 years to
determine if changes in physical and psychological status were associated with
improvements in chronic fatigue, physical functioning, and return to work. Results
indicated that improvement in psychological symptoms, DSM-III-R disorders, physical
examination signs, and changes in whether the patient continued to meet criteria for
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) were associated with recovery from fatigue, improved
functioning, and return to work. Patients who never met CFS criteria or only met criteria
at the initial assessment, reported improved physical functioning. Patients whose
psychiatric disorders and physical examination signs were still present at a mean
follow-up time of 2.5 years were more likely to have persistent fatigue and work
disability. Loss of physical examination signs was a significant independent predictor of
improved functioning and return to work. These results suggest that psychiatric status, as
well as physical status, are associated with recovery from chronic fatigue. PMID: 9720856,
UI: 98385810
J Psychosom Res 1998 Jul;45(1 Spec No):39-51 Coping and adaptive outcome in chronic
fatigue syndrome: importance of illness cognitions. Heijmans MJ Department of Clinical and
Health Psychology, Utrecht University, The Netherlands. M.Heijmans@fsw.ruu.nl In this study, the relations between illness
representations, coping behavior, and adaptive outcomes in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)
patients (N=98) were examined. Following Leventhal's self-regulation model, it was
hypothesized that illness representations would be directly related to coping and, via
coping, to adaptive outcome. The results showed patients who considered their illness to
be a serious condition, who believed that they had no control over their illness, who saw
little possibility for cure, and who believed their illness to have serious consequences
to cope with their illness in a passive way, report higher levels of impairment in
physical and social functioning and report greater problems in mental health and vitality.
A series of regression analyses showed illness representations to be stronger predictors
of adaptive outcome than coping scores. The implications of these findings for the
treatment of CFS patients are discussed. PMID: 9720854, UI: 98385808
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 1998 Nov-Dec;1(6):193-5 Three cases
of dermatomyositis erroneously diagnosed as "chronic fatigue syndrome". Fiore G,
Giacovazzo F, Giacovazzo M VI Cattedra di Medicina Interna, Universita La Sapienza, Roma,
Italy. The authors report three cases of dermatomyositis, which ha been erroneously
diagnosed as "chronic fatigue syndrome" due to the presence of elevated titers
of serum anti-Epstein Barr antibodies. PMID: 9718854, UI: 98384992
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1998 Jun;48(6):733-7 The low dose ACTH test in
chronic fatigue syndrome and in health. Scott LV, Medbak S, Dinan TG Department of
Psychiatry, Trinity College Medical School, Dublin, Eire. OBJECTIVE: A
number of dynamic tests of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis provide evidence for a
mild central adrenal insufficiency in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The 1 microgram
adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) test has been proposed to be more sensitive than the standard
250 micrograms ACTH test in the detection of subtle pituitary-adrenal hypofunctioning. We
aimed to establish whether the 1 microgram ACTH test would support such a dysregulation in
CFS, and also, given the relative novelty of this test in clinical practice and the
uncertainty with regard to appropriate cut-off values for normality, to compare our
healthy volunteer data with those of previous studies. PATIENTS AND DESIGN: Twenty
subjects with CFS, diagnosed according to Centres for Disease Control and Prevention
criteria, were compared with 20 healthy volunteer subjects. All participants underwent a 1
microgram ACTH test beginning at 1400 h. Plasma samples for cortisol estimation were drawn
at 0, +30 and +40 min. RESULTS: Baseline cortisol values did not differ between CFS
patients and healthy subjects. The delta cortisol (maximum increment from baseline) value
was significantly lower in the CFS than the volunteer group (P < 0.05). Comparison of
the +30 min cortisol values revealed no significant differences. Using an incremental
cortisol of 250 nmol/l as an arbitrary cutoff point, two (10%) of the healthy subjects and
nine (45%) of the CFS subjects failed the test on this basis (chi 2 = 4.3, df = 38, P <
0.05). CONCLUSIONS: This study provides further evidence for a subtle pituitary-adrenal
insufficiency in subjects with chronic fatigue syndrome compared to healthy volunteers.
Disparities between our healthy volunteer data and those of other groups using the 1
microgram ACTH test suggest that the test may not be as reliable as previously indicated.
PMID: 9713562, UI: 98379184
Aust N Z J Psychiatry 1998 Aug;32(4):523-7 Chronic fatigue syndrome: an immunological
perspective. Vollmer-Conna U, Lloyd A, Hickie I, Wakefield D Inflammation Research Unit,
School of Pathology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to review research examining an immunological
basis for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and to discuss how a disturbance in immunity
could produce central nervous system (CNS)-mediated symptoms. METHOD: Data relevant to the
hypothesis that abnormal cytokine release plays a role in the pathogenesis of CFS are
reviewed as well as recent evidence relating to potential mechanisms by which immune
products may enter the brain and produce a disturbance in CNS processes. RESULTS:
Examinations of cytokine levels in patients with CFS have produced inconclusive results.
Recent evidence suggests that abnormal release of cytokines within the CNS may cause
neural dysfunction by a variety of complex mechanisms. CONCLUSION: Neuropsychiatric
symptoms in patients with CFS may be more closely related to disordered cytokine
production by glial cells within the CNS than to circulating cytokines. This possibility
is discussed in the context of unresolved issues in the pathogenesis of CFS. PMID:
9711366, UI: 98377225
J Clin Immunol 1998 Jul;18(4):291-8 Hormonal influences on stress-induced neutrophil
mobilization in health and chronic fatigue syndrome. Cannon JG, Angel JB, Abad LW, O'Grady
J, Lundgren N, Fagioli L, Komaroff AL Department of Medicine, New England Medical Center,
Boston, Massachusetts, USA. jgc2@psu.edu This
investigation tested the hypotheses that women diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome
(CFS) would exhibit significantly greater systemic indices of exercise-induced leukocyte
mobilization and inflammation (neutrophilia, lactoferrin release, complement activation)
than controls matched for age, weight, and habitual activity and that responses in the
luteal phase of the menstrual cycle would be greater than in the follicular phase.
Subjects stepped up and down on a platform adjusted to the height of the patella for 15
min, paced by metronome. Blood samples were collected under basal conditions (the day
before exercise) and following exercise for determination of circulating neutrophils and
plasma concentrations of lactoferrin, C3a des arg, and creatine kinase. Complete, 24-hr
urine collections were made for determination of cortisol excretion. For all subjects,
circulating neutrophil counts increased 33% (P < 0.0001) and lactoferrin increased 27%
(P = 0.0006) after exercise, whereas plasma C3a des arg and creatine kinase did not
increase. No indication of an exaggerated or excessive response was observed in the CFS
patients compared to the controls. In healthy women, circulating neutrophil numbers
exhibited previously described relationships with physiological variables: basal
neutrophil counts correlated with plasma progesterone concentrations (R = 0.726, P =
0.003) and the exercise-induced neutrophilia correlated with both urinary cortisol (R =
0.660, P = 0.007) and plasma creatine kinase (R = 0.523, P = 0.038) concentrations. These
relationships were not observed in the CFS patients (R = 0.240, P = 0.370; R = 0.042, P =
0.892; and R = 0.293, P = 0.270; respectively). These results suggest that normal
endocrine influences on the circulating neutrophil pool may be disrupted in patients with
CFS. PMID: 9710746, UI: 98376605
Psychosom Med 1998 Jul-Aug;60(4):394-401 Sociosomatics and illness in chronic fatigue
syndrome. Ware NC Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115, USA. nware@warren.med.harvard.edu OBJECTIVE: This study examines social processes that construct the course of
chronic illness. Specifically, it identifies and describes mechanisms that constitute the
process of role constriction in employment for individuals with chronic illness. METHOD:
Sixty-six persons meeting the Centers for Disease Control case definition of chronic
fatigue syndrome (CFS) participated in a longitudinal study involving three waves of data
collection over 3 years. Qualitative and quantitative methods were combined in the
research, which included face-to-face semistructured interviews, telephone interviews, and
self-report questionnaires. Materials presented in this study are drawn principally from
the Year 1 face-to-face and telephone interviews. RESULTS: When patterns of symptoms and
of the illness course in CFS intersect with work requirements, they impede performance and
place ill individuals at risk for job loss. Persons with CFS devise and implement specific
strategies to resist role constriction and remain in the work force. CONCLUSIONS: Role
constriction is a social process of marginalization in chronic illness. Opposing forces of
marginalization and resistance define the social course in chronic illness and suggest
that chronicity can be thought of as a marginalized position in social space. PMID:
9710284, UI: 98374058
Rev Belge Med Dent 1997;52(4):115-23 [Etiologic factors in temporomandibular joint
disorders and pain]. [Article in French] De Laat A Departement d'Odontologie, Universite
Catholique de Leuven. Parallel to the construction of
better classifications and the identification of subgroups of temporomandibular disorders,
an important development has taken place in research concerning its etiology. The
etiological factors implied in muscle problems refer to more generalised disorders as
myofascial pain syndrome and fibromyalgia. The role of occlusal and articular factors has
been brought down to realistic proportions, indicating a minor contribution. Similarly,
doubt has arisen concerning the existence of a vicious cycle of pain/spasm/pain. With
regard to internal derangements, emphasis has been put on the high prevalence in an
otherwise normal population and the fluctuating character of the symptom. Also here,
developments point towards constitutional and systemic factors, more than local
influences. Trauma, however, seems to play an increasing role. The development of
osteoarthrosis has been studied more in depth revealing local processes of inflammation,
neurogenic inflammation and the existence of specific markers which might be important in
the future. The relationship between disc derangement and the development of
osteoarthrosis remains unclear. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9709799,
UI: 98375564
Neurosci Lett 1998 Jul 10;250(3):205-7 Increased capsaicin-induced
secondary hyperalgesia as a marker of abnormal sensory activity in patients with
fibromyalgia. Morris V, Cruwys S, Kidd B Bone and Joint Research Unit, St Bartholomew's
and Royal London Hospital School of Medicine, UK. In this study,
capsaicin-induced secondary hyperalgesia was assessed as a marker of abnormal nociceptive
processing in patients with fibromyalgia (FM). The area of mechanical secondary
hyperalgesia induced by a standard solution of capsaicin placed on the volar forearm was
measured in ten patients with FM and the results compared to those obtained in ten
patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and ten normal subjects. The area of secondary
hyperalgesia was found to be substantially increased in both the FM and RA groups compared
with controls. In the FM group the area of hyperalgesia correlated with the overall pain
score and with the joint tenderness score. The results suggest that in FM there is
enhanced sensitivity of nociceptive neurones at a spinal level, thereby supporting the
concept of a generalised disturbance of pain modulation in this disorder. PMID: 9708868,
UI: 98372599
Neuropsychobiology 1998;38(1):13-8 Serum neopterin and somatization in women with
chemical intolerance, depressives, and normals. Bell IR, Patarca R, Baldwin CM, Klimas NG,
Schwartz GE, Hardin EE Department of Psychiatry, Psychology, Family and Community
Medicine, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, and the Department of Psychiatry,
Tucson Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Tucson, Ariz., USA. The symptom of intolerance to low levels of environmental chemicals (CI,
chemical intolerance) is a feature of several controversial polysymptomatic conditions
that overlap symptomatically with depression and somatization, i.e., chronic fatigue
syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivity, and Persian Gulf syndrome. These
syndromes can involve many somatic symptoms consistent with possible inflammation.
Immunological or neurogenic triggering might account for such inflammation. Serum
neopterin, which has an inverse relationship with l-tryptophan availability, may offer a
marker of inflammation and macrophage/monocyte activation. This study compared middle-aged
women with CI (who had high levels of affective distress; n = 14), depressives without CI
(n = 10), and normals (n = 11). Groups did not differ in 4 p.m. resting levels of serum
neopterin. However, the CI alone had strong positive correlations between neopterin and
all of the scales measuring somatization. These preliminary findings suggest the need for
additional research on biological correlates of 'unexplained' multiple somatic symptoms in
subtypes of apparent somatizing disorders. Publication Types: Clinical trial Controlled
clinical trial PMID: 9701717, UI: 98369085
Acta Odontol Scand 1998 Jun;56(3):129-34 Effect of local
glucocorticoid injection on masseter muscle level of serotonin in patients with chronic
myalgia. Ernberg M, Hedenberg-Magnusson B, Alstergren P, Kopp S Department of Clinical
Oral Physiology, Faculty of Odontology, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge, Sweden. The aim of this study was to compare the effects on the level of serotonin (5-HT)
in the masseter muscle by intramuscular glucocorticoid (GC) administration in patients
with fibromyalgia (FM) and localized myalgia (LM), as well as to determine associated
changes in pain, tenderness, and microcirculation. The study comprised 22 patients with
pain and tenderness in the masseter muscle region. Ten patients (all women) had FNI, and
12 (1 man and 11 women) had LM involving the temporomandibular system. The patients were
examined clinically and by microdialysis at 2 visits 2-3 weeks apart and received local
glucocorticoid treatment at the first visit. The ratio (S1/S2) between the initial level
of 5-HT (S1) and steady state level (S2) was used as a relative measure of the
intramuscular release of 5-HT. This ratio decreased significantly after treatment in the
FM group. In the FM group there was also a negative correlation regarding changes between
visits of 5-HT and changes of intramuscular temperature. In the LM group there was a
negative correlation regarding changes between visits of 5-HT and changes of pressure pain
threshold and pressure pain tolerance level. This study indicates that there is a
reduction of the ratio between initial 5-HT and steady state level in the painful masseter
muscle after intramuscular GC administration to FM patients, a reduction not present in
the LM patients. In addition, 5-HT seems to be involved in the modulation of local muscle
microcirculation in FM patients and in hyperalgesia in LM patients. PMID: 9688220, UI:
98351506
West J Nurs Res 1998 Aug;20(4):501-7 Balancing ethical quandaries with scientific
rigor: Part 2. Pallikkathayil L, Crighton F, Aaronson LS University of Kansas School of
Nursing, USA. Traditional ethical concerns in research tend to focus on
serious misconduct such as fabricating data and gross violations of informed consent. In
this two-part article, we focused on some of the less serious and more subtle ethical
quandaries, inherent and common in most social science research. It is our thesis that
these issues are important and warrant more attention and careful thought than they have
been accorded in the scientific literature and, perhaps, by investigators at large. In
Part 2, we provided examples of how we, and others, dealt with some of these issues in
actual studies. However, we also must emphasize the individual and reflective nature of
confronting ethical issues in research. We found many benefits in using a team approach to
address ethical dilemmas during implementation of our studies. Doing so kept everyone
honest with themselves and each other, shared the burden of responsibility among team
members for the decisions made, maximized the use of team members' strengths, and led to
much better resolutions of the issues from both a scientific and an ethical perspective.
Maintaining scientific rigor while balancing and deliberating about the ethical
implications of decisions is a challenge for all research teams. It requires learning how
to be vigilant and responsive when faced with the many subtle, but ever-present,
scientific and ethical quandaries encountered when doing what is often assumed to be
nonthreatening social research. There are no fixed, prescriptive rules for what to do in
every study. Rather, a reflective process, considering the specific issues of each unique
study, is required. PMID: 9686526, UI: 98351145
Pediatrics 1998 Aug;102(2 Pt 1):360-6 Course and outcome of chronic fatigue in children
and adolescents. Krilov LR, Fisher M, Friedman SB, Reitman D, Mandel FS Department of
Pediatrics, North Shore University Hospital, New York University School of Medicine,
Manhasset, New York 11030, USA. PURPOSE: To describe
the epidemiology, symptoms, and psychosocial characteristics of children and adolescents
evaluated in a chronic fatigue program and determine the course and outcome of the
syndrome in these patients. METHODS: During the summer of 1994, chart review was performed
for the 58 patients evaluated between 1990 and 1994 and a telephone follow-up was
conducted with 42 of the 58 families. Patients were predominantly female (71%) and white
(94%), with 50% between the ages of 7 and 14 years and 50% between the ages of 15 and 21
years (mean age 14.6 years). RESULTS: At time of presentation, 50% of patients had been
fatigued for 1 to 6 months and 50% had been fatigued for 7 to 36 months. Sixty percent
indicated the fatigue had begun with an acute illness and 60% had a history of allergies.
Most commonly reported symptoms were fatigue (100%), headache (74%), sore throat (59%),
abdominal pain (48%), fever (36%), and difficulties with concentration and/or memory
(33%). Most patients had a worsening of school performance and a decrease in social
activities. On follow-up, there was significant improvement in many patients during the
summer after the first visit, with continued improvement in most patients during the
second and third years. At time of the follow-up telephone call, 43% of families
considered their child "cured" and 52% considered their child
"improved," whereas only 5% considered their child to be "the same."
Statistical analyses demonstrated no demographic or clinical factors that distinguished
between those who did or did not participate in the follow-up study, or between those who
did or did not do well on follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that children and
adolescents with chronic fatigue have a syndrome that is similar to that described in
adults, but that the syndrome differs in several ways, most specifically, presentation
earlier in the course of the illness and a more optimistic outcome. PMID: 9685439, UI:
98352248
Postgrad Med J 1998 Apr;74(870):229-32 Phosphate diabetes in patients with chronic
fatigue syndrome. De Lorenzo F, Hargreaves J, Kakkar VV Beatrice Research Centre, London,
UK. Phosphate depletion is associated with
neuromuscular dysfunction due to changes in mitochondrial respiration that result in a
defect of intracellular oxidative metabolism. Phosphate diabetes causes phosphate
depletion due to abnormal renal re-absorption of phosphate be the proximal renal tubule.
Most of the symptoms presented by patients with phosphate diabetes such as myalgia,
fatigue and mild depression, are also common in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome,
but this differential diagnosis has not been considered. We investigated the possible
association between chronic fatigue syndrome and phosphate diabetes in 87 patients who
fulfilled the criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Control subjects were 37 volunteers,
who explicitly denied fatigue and chronic illness on a screening questionnaire.
Re-absorption of phosphate by the proximal renal tubule, phosphate clearance and renal
threshold phosphate concentration were the main outcome measures in both groups. Of the 87
patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, nine also fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for
phosphate diabetes. In conclusion, we report a previously undefined relationship between
chronic fatigue syndrome and phosphate diabetes. Phosphate diabetes should be considered
in differential diagnosis with chronic fatigue syndrome; further studies are needed to
investigate the incidence of phosphate diabetes in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome
and the possible beneficial effect of vitamin D and oral phosphate supplements. PMID:
9683977, UI: 98348602
Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1998 Jul;88(1):96-104 Dysfunction of natural killer activity
in a family with chronic fatigue syndrome. Levine PH, Whiteside TL, Friberg D, Bryant J,
Colclough G, Herberman RB National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, 20892, USA. A family was identified with 5 of 6 siblings and 3 other
immediate family members who had developed chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) as adults. All 8
met criteria for the CFS case definition as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Sixty-eight blood samples were obtained over a period of 2 years from 20
family members (8 affected, 12 unaffected) and 8 normal controls. All blood samples were
tested for NK activity in 4-h 51Cr-release assays and for the number of circulating
CD3-CD56(+) and CD3-CD16(+) by flow cytometry. NK activity of the affected immediate
family members (cases, n = 8) was significantly lower (P = 0.006, two-sided) than that of
the concurrently tested normal controls. The results for unaffected family members were
intermediate between these two groups, and the pairwise comparison of unaffected family
members to either cases or controls showed no statistically significant difference (P =
0.29, two-sided). No differences were seen between the groups in the absolute number of
CD3-CD56(+) or CD3-CD16(+) lymphocytes in the peripheral blood. Familial CFS was
associated with persistently low NK activity, which was documented in 6/8 cases and in
4/12 unaffected family members. In the family with 5 of 6 siblings who had documented CFS,
2 of their offspring had pediatric malignancies. Low NK activity in this family may be a
result of a genetically determined immunologic abnormality predisposing to CFS and cancer.
PMID: 9683556, UI: 98350101
Altern Ther Health Med 1998 Mar;4(2):67-70 A pilot study of
cognitive behavioral therapy in fibromyalgia. Singh BB, Berman BM, Hadhazy VA, Creamer P
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA. bsingh@compmed.ummc.ab.umd.edu BACKGROUND: Fibromyalgia is a syndrome characterized by widespread
musculoskeletal pain and multiple tender points as well as high levels of self-reported
disability and poor quality of life. OBJECTIVES: In this pilot study, a mind-body approach
(cognitive-behavioral therapy) was tested that has been successful in treating chronic
back pain patients to determine whether it would improve function, decrease perceived
pain, and improve mood state for fibromyalgia patients. PARTICIPANTS: 28 patients
recruited from the greater Baltimore area. INTERVENTION: Eight weekly sessions, 2 1/2
hours each, with three components: an educational component focusing on the mind-body
connection, a portion focusing on relaxation response mechanisms (primarily mindfulness
meditation techniques), and a qigong movement therapy session. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Data
collection instruments were the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire, the Health Assessment
Questionnaire, the Beck Depression Inventory, the Coping Strategies Questionnaire, the
helplessness subscale of the Arthritis Attitudes Index, the Medical Outcomes Study Short
Form General Health Survey, and a double-anchored 100-mm visual analog scale to assess
sleep. RESULTS: Twenty patients completed the study. Standard outcome measures showed
significant reduction in pain, fatigue, and sleeplessness; and improved function, mood
state, and general health following an 8-week intervention. CONCLUSION: A mind-body
intervention including patient education, meditation techniques, and movement therapy
appears to be an effective adjunctive therapy for patients with fibromyalgia. PMID:
9682514, UI: 98347436
HNO 1998 Jun;46(6):583-6 [Incidence and clinical relevance of antibodies to
phospholipids, serotonin and ganglioside in patients with sudden deafness and progressive
inner ear hearing loss]. [Article in German] Heller U, Becker EW, Zenner HP, Berg PA
HNO-Klinik, Universitat Tubingen. Immunoserological
assays of patients with sudden deafness and progressive hearing losses have revealed the
presence of different antibodies, leading to the assumption that immunological processes
may be involved. Recent investigations have demonstrated that these patients have
phospholipid antibodies that can cause venous or arterial vasculopathies. In the present
study we analyzed the incidence of these antibodies in patients with inner ear disorders.
Sera of 55 patients with sudden deafness and 80 patients with progressive hearing loss
were tested. Phospholipid antibodies were demonstrable in 49% of the patients with sudden
hearing loss and 50% of the patients with progressive hearing loss. Serotonin and
ganglioside antibodies were found in 53% of the patients with sudden hearing loss and 63%
of the patients with progressive hearing loss. Since these three antibodies are also
frequently found in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and chronic fatigue syndrome
(CFS), 28 of the patients studied displayed symptoms typical for these disorders,
including fatigue, myalgia, arthralgia, depressions, sicca symptoms and diarrhea. We now
recommend questioning patients suffering from inner ear disorders for symptoms typical for
FMS or CFS, since these diseases are often closely related to inner ear disorders. If
symptoms are present, antibodies should be tested against phospholipids, serotonin and
gangliosides. If present, the antibodies are diagnostic for each syndrome. Additionally
these immunologic and serologic findings show that these antibodies may play a role in the
etiology of hearing loss disorders. Comments: Comment in: HNO 1998 Jun;46(6):565-6 PMID:
9677490, UI: 98342454
J Rheumatol 1998 Jul;25(7):1374-81 Function of the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in patients with fibromyalgia and low back pain. Griep
EN, Boersma JW, Lentjes EG, Prins AP, van der Korst JK, de Kloet ER Research Department,
Jan van Breemen Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. OBJECTIVE: We
suggested fibromyalgia (FM) is a disorder associated with an altered functioning of the
stress-response system. This was concluded from hyperreactive pituitary
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) release in response to corticotropin-releasing hormone
(CRH) and to insulin induced hypoglycemia in patients with FM. In this study, we tested
the validity and specificity of this observation compared to another painful condition,
low back pain. METHODS: We recruited 40 patients with primary FM (F:M 36:4), 28 patients
(25:3) with chronic noninflammatory low back pain (LBP), and 14 (12:2) healthy, sedentary
controls. A standard 100 microg CRH challenge test was performed with measurement of ACTH
and cortisol levels at 9 time points. They were also subjected to an overnight
dexamethasone suppression test, followed by injection of synthetic ACTH1-24. At 9 AM, the
patients divided in 2 groups, received either 0.025 or 0.100 microg ACTH/kg body weight to
test for adrenocortical sensitivity. Basal adrenocortical function was assessed mainly by
measurement of 24 h urinary excretion of free cortisol. RESULTS: Compared to the controls,
the patients with FM displayed a hyperreactive ACTH release in response to CRH challenge
(ANOVA interaction effect p = 0.001). The mean ACTH response of the patients with low back
pain appeared enhanced also, but to a significantly lesser extent (p = 0.02 at maximum
level) than observed in the patients with FM. The cortisol response was the same in the 3
groups. Following dexamethasone intake there were 2 and 4 nonsuppressors in the FM and LBP
groups, respectively. The very low and low dose of exogenous ACTH1-24 evoked a dose and
time dependent cortisol response, which, however, was not significantly different between
the 3 groups. The 24 h urinary free cortisol levels were significantly lower (p = 0.02)
than controls in both patient groups; patients with FM also displayed significantly lower
(p < 0.05) basal total plasma cortisol than controls. CONCLUSION: The present data
validate and substantiate our preliminary evidence for a dysregulation of the HPA axis in
patients with FM, marked by mild hypocortisolemia, hyperreactivity of pituitary ACTH
release to CRH, and glucocorticoid feedback resistance. Patients with LBP also display
hypocortisolemia, but only a tendency toward the disrupted HPA features observed in the
patients with FM. We propose that a reduced containment of the stress-response system by
corticosteroid hormones is associated with the symptoms of FM. PMID: 9676772, UI: 98339394
J Rheumatol 1998 Jul;25(7):1369-73 Ethnocultural and educational differences in Israeli
women correlate with pain perception in fibromyalgia. Neumann L, Buskila D Epidemiology
Department, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Soroka Medical Center, Beer Sheva,
Israel. OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical features
of patients with fibromyalgia (FM) in 2 ethnic groups in Israel. METHODS: One hundred
women with FM participated in the study; 70 were of Sephardic (Mediterranean) origin and
30 of Ashkenazic (European-American) origin. Assessment of FM related symptoms,
tenderness, quality of life, and physical functioning was conducted in all subjects.
Analysis of covariance and multivariate regression were performed to study the association
between these measures and ethnicity, controlling for age and education. RESULTS:
Sephardic patients with FM reported more frequent and more severe symptoms than Ashkenazic
patients. They had higher point counts and decreased quality of life. When the patients
were divided into 2 age groups (age 45 being the cutoff point), the differences were
observed only among the older subjects, most of whom were immigrants. Sephardic older
patients had significantly higher point counts than Ashkenazic patients, and lower
tenderness thresholds. They reported significantly higher levels of pain, fatigue, and
stiffness, and were less satisfied with their life. However, these differences observed
between the 2 ethnic groups in the univariate data analysis disappeared when age and
education were jointly controlled in multivariate regression analysis. Age had
significantly contributed to the variation in the point count, the reported pain, and
physical functioning. Education made a significant contribution in explaining the point
count, quality of life, pain, and fatigue. CONCLUSION: Education, rather than ethnic
identity, has been found to be an important factor in clinical features of FM. Future
studies should include ethnocultural and educational assessment, especially in countries
with high immigration rates and diverse ethnic groups, such as the USA and Canada. PMID:
9676771, UI: 98339393
JAMA 1998 Jul 15;280(3):264-6 Reviewing the reviews: the example of chronic fatigue
syndrome. Joyce J, Rabe-Hesketh S, Wessely S Institute of Psychiatry, King's College
School of Medicine, London, England. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that
the selection of literature in review articles is unsystematic and is influenced by the
authors' discipline and country of residence. DATA SOURCES: Reviews in English published
between 1980 and March 1996 in MEDLINE, EMBASE (BIDS), PSYCHLIT, and Current Contents were
searched. STUDY SELECTION: Reviews of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) were selected.
Articles explicitly concerned with a specialty aspect of CFS and unattributed,
unreferenced, or insufficiently referenced articles were discarded. DATA EXTRACTION:
Record of data sources in each review was noted as was the departmental specialty of the
first author and his or her country of residence. The references cited in each index paper
were tabulated by assigning them to 6 specialty categories, by article title, and by
assigning them to 8 categories, by country of journal publication. DATA SYNTHESIS: Of 89
reviews, 3 (3.4%) reported on literature search and described search method. Authors from
laboratory-based disciplines preferentially cited laboratory references, while
psychiatry-based disciplines preferentially cited psychiatric literature (P = .01). A
total of 71.6% of references cited by US authors were from US journals, while 54.9% of
references cited by United Kingdom authors were published in United Kingdom journals (P =
.001). CONCLUSION: Citation of the literature is influenced by review authors' discipline
and nationality. PMID: 9676676, UI: 98339298
Rheumatol Int 1998;18(1):35-6 Pain treatment of fibromyalgia by acupuncture. Sprott H,
Franke S, Kluge H, Hein G The lack of objective
parameters makes the measurement of pain and the efficacy of pain treatment in patients
with chronic pain very difficult. We performed acupuncture therapy in fibromyalgia
patients and established a combination of methods to objectify pain measurement before and
after therapy. The parameters corresponded to patients' self-report. Twenty-nine
fibromyalgia patients as defined by ACR-criteria (25 women, 4 men) with a mean age of 48.2
+/- 2.0 years and a mean disease duration of 6.1 +/- 1.0 years participated in the study.
Pain levels and positive tender points were assessed using the visual analogue scale (VAS,
i.e., range 0-100 mm) and dolorimetry. Serotonin and substance P levels in serum and the
serotonin concentration in platelets were measured concomitantly. During acupuncture
therapy no analgesic medication was allowed. The VAS scores decreased from 64.0 +/- 3.4 mm
before therapy to 34.5 +/- 4.3 mm after therapy (P < 0.001). Dolorimetry revealed a
decreased number of tender points after therapy from 16.0 +/- 0.6 to 11.8 +/- 1.0, P <
0.01. Serotonin levels decreased from 715.8 +/- 225.8 micrograms/10(12) platelets to 352.4
+/- 47.9 micrograms/10(12) platelets (P < 0.01), whereas the serum concentration
increased from 134.0 +/- 14.3 ng/ml to 171.2 +/- 14.6 ng/ml (P < 0.01). Substance P
levels in serum increased from 43.4 +/- 3.5 pg/ml to 66.9 +/- 8.8 pg/ml (P < 0.01).
Acupuncture treatment of patients with fibromyalgia was associated with decreased pain
levels and fewer positive tender points as measured by VAS and dolorimetry. This was
accompanied by decreased serotonin concentration in platelets and an increase of serotonin
and substance P levels in serum. These results suggest that acupuncture therapy is
associated with changes in the concentrations of pain-modulating substances in serum. The
preliminary results are objective parameters for acupuncture efficacy in patients with
fibromyalgia. Publication Types: Letter PMID: 9672997, UI: 98336868
Rheumatol Int 1998;18(1):17-20 Clinical diagnosis found in patients with Raynaud's
phenomenon: a multicentre study. Grassi W, De Angelis R, Lapadula G, Leardini G, Scarpa R
Clinica Reumatologica, Ospedale A. Murri, Jesi, Italy. A multicentre observational study was conducted in order to detect the major
clinical diagnosis found in 761 patients with Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) attending 50
Italian centres for rheumatology and internal medicine. Systemic sclerosis was the most
frequent condition associated with secondary RP, occurring in 216 (28.4%) patients. The
other most frequent clinical diagnoses included systemic lupus erythematosus (52 cases:
6.8%) and rheumatoid arthritis (38 cases: 5%). Other RP-related diseases (hypertension,
Sjogren's syndrome, mixed connective tissue disease, undifferentiated connective tissue
disease, fibromyalgia, carpal tunnel syndrome, cryoglobulinemia, dermatopolymyositis,
vasculitis, thoracic outlet syndrome, hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus) occurred in less
than 5% of cases. A total of 130 (48%) out of 268 patients with primary RP showed one or
more clinical features indicating a fairly high risk of evolving into fully established
systemic sclerosis. None of these patients fulfilled the ACR criteria for systemic
sclerosis. This study shows that over 50% of patients with RP attending 50 Italian centres
for rheumatology and internal medicine had a connective tissue disease. The large number
of patients with primary RP and isolated clinical features of connective tissue disease
indicates that more efforts should be focused on developing new criteria for the
classification of RP. Publication Types: Multicenter study PMID: 9672994, UI: 98336865
Acta Psychiatr Scand 1998 Jun;97(6):450-7 Blunted
adrenocorticotropin and cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation
in chronic fatigue syndrome. Scott LV, Medbak S, Dinan TG Department of Psychological
Medicine, St Bartholomew's and the Royal London School of Medicine, West Smithfield, UK. Hypofunctioning of the pituitary-adrenal axis has been suggested as the
pathophysiological basis for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Blunted adrenocorticotropin
(ACTH) responses but normal cortisol responses to exogenous corticotropin-releasing
hormone (CRH), the main regulator of this axis, have been previously demonstrated in CFS
patients, some of whom had a comorbid psychiatric disorder. We wished to re-examine CRH
activation of this axis in CFS patients free from concurrent psychiatric illness. A sample
of 14 patients with CDC-diagnosed CFS were compared with 14 healthy volunteers. ACTH and
cortisol responses were measured following the administration of 100 microg ovine CRH.
Basal ACTH and cortisol values did not differ between the two groups. The release of ACTH
was significantly attenuated in the CFS group (P < 0.005), as was the release of
cortisol (P < 0.05). The blunted response of ACTH to exogenous CRH stimulation may be
due to an abnormality in CRH levels with a resultant alteration in pituitary CRH receptor
sensitivity, or it may reflect a dysregulation of vasopressin or other factors involved in
HPA regulation. A diminished output of neurotrophic ACTH, causing a reduced adrenocortical
secretory reserve, inadequately compensated for by adrenoceptor upregulation, may explain
the reduced cortisol production demonstrated in this study. PMID: 9669518, UI: 98332181
Arthritis Care Res 1998 Apr;11(2):116-23 Validation of questionnaire-based response
criteria of treatment efficacy in the fibromyalgia syndrome. Finckh A, Morabia A, Deluze
C, Vischer T Department of Internal Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland. OBJECTIVE: To compare the validity of self-reported questionnaires as response
criteria of treatment efficacy in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome. METHOD: At the
beginning of the treatment period, 70 fibromyalgia patients, randomly allocated to
electro-acupuncture or placebo, underwent a clinical evaluation by rheumatologists and
answered 1) a generic quality of life questionnaire--the Psychological General Well-Being
Index (PGWB), 2) a specific function and symptom questionnaire, and 3) a pain
questionnaire--the Regional Pain Score (RPS). The same evaluation was repeated at the end
of the treatment period. Severity of the condition was assessed by a composite outcome
score, a combination of different clinical outcome measures forming a clinical severity
index. The variations between these questionnaire scores before and after treatment and
the variations between the clinical severity indices estimated by clinicians were used as
measures of the treatment impact. The first rationale for the validation was a positive
correlation between clinical and questionnaire score changes. Another rationale for
validation of the new instruments was the ability to identify the different treatment
interventions. RESULTS: The correlation between the clinical severity index and the RPS
was good (r = 0.62). Moreover, the RPS demonstrated a good discriminant power in detecting
patients with effective treatment: it showed a specificity of 74% and a sensitivity of
75%. The PGWB correlated less well with the clinical score and was less discriminant. The
specific function and symptom questionnaire showed little additional validity.
CONCLUSIONS: Outcomes of syndrome severity such as pain and subjective well-being, as
measured by self-reported questionnaires, can be valid instruments to evaluate treatment
efficacy in short-term clinical trials. In the current study, the RPS proved to be
particularly useful to assess the widespread tenderness of fibromyalgia and demonstrated
high discriminative power. PMID: 9668734, UI: 98333331
Arthritis Care Res 1998 Apr;11(2):102-15 Sexual and physical abuse in women with
fibromyalgia: association with outpatient health care utilization and pain medication
usage. Alexander RW, Bradley LA, Alarcon GS, Triana-Alexander M, Aaron LA, Alberts KR,
Martin MY, Stewart KE Department of Psychology (Medical Psychology Program), University of
Alabama at Birmingham 35294, USA. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate
the relationship between sexual and/or physical abuse and health care usage in patients
with fibromyalgia (FM) and identify variables that may influence this relationship.
METHODS: We assessed history of sexual/physical abuse, health care utilization, and
medication usage, as well as related variables in 75 women with FM using standardized
questionnaires, structured interviews, and laboratory pain perception tasks. RESULTS:
Fifty-seven percent of FM patients reported a history of sexual/physical abuse. Compared
to non-abused patients, abused patients reported significantly greater utilization of
outpatient health care services for problems other than FM and greater use of medications
for pain (P < or = 0.025). Consistent with our expectations, abused patients also were
characterized by significantly greater pain, fatigue, functional disability, and stress,
as well as by a tendency to label dolorimeter stimuli as painful regardless of their
intensities (P < or = 0.05). Additional analyses suggested that the high frequency of
sexual/physical abuse in our patients was associated primarily with seeking health care
for chronic pain rather than the FM syndrome itself or genetic factors. CONCLUSION: There
is an association in FM patients between sexual/physical abuse and increased use of
outpatient health care services and medications for pain. This association may be
influenced by clinical symptoms, functional disability, psychiatric disorders, stress, and
abnormal pain perception. The relationships among these variables should be further tested
in prospective, population-based studies. PMID: 9668733, UI: 98333330
Headache 1998 Jun;38(6):436-41 Migraine chronobiology. Fox AW, Davis RL Clinical
Research and Regulatory Affairs, Cypros Pharmaceutical Corporation, Carlsbad, Calf, USA. This study was undertaken to determine whether migraine
attacks exhibits circadian, menstrual, or seasonal variations in frequency and, thus, to
characterize more precisely this relapsing, remittent, pleomorphic disease. An analysis of
3582 well-documented migraine attacks in 1698 adults was undertaken. The demographics of
the study population accurately represented the known epidemiology of the disease.
Migraine attacks started more frequently between 4 AM and 9 AM and within the first few
days after onset of menses; this migraine periodicity is strongest amongst women not using
oral contraceptives. Seasonal periodicity, if any, is clearly weaker than circadian or
menstrual. These chronobiological features may assist in the differential diagnosis of
migraine from premenstrual headache and fibromyalgia. PMID: 9664747, UI: 98329449
Clin Geriatr Med 1998 Aug;14(3):601-11 Soft tissue problems in older adults. Holland
NW, Gonzalez EB Division of Rheumatology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Decatur, Georgia 30033, USA. This article describes common soft tissue problems encountered in older
adults, including fibromyalgia, selected bursitis/tendinitis syndromes, nerve entrapment
syndromes, and miscellaneous topics such as Dupuytren's contractures, trigger fingers,
palmar fasciitis, and reflex-sympathetic dystrophy. Clinical presentations, diagnosis, and
treatment are emphasized. These are conditions that are frequently encountered but are
generally diagnosed as arthritis or normal age-related problems. This article will
hopefully enlighten the reader in distinguishing between these conditions. Publication
Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9664108, UI: 98330428
Am J Epidemiol 1998 Jul 1;148(1):72-7 Factor analysis of unexplained severe fatigue and
interrelated symptoms: overlap with criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Nisenbaum R,
Reyes M, Mawle AC, Reeves WC Klemm Analysis Group, Atlanta, GA, USA. The
objective of this study was to identify factors explaining the correlations among
unexplained severe fatigue of different durations (1-5 months or > or =6 months) and
symptoms reported as being significant health problems during a preceding 4-week period.
Between June and December of 1994, a cross-sectional, random digit dialing telephone
survey was conducted among residents of San Francisco, California. All subjects who
reported having severe fatigue lasting for > or =1 month and a random sample of
nonfatigued subjects were asked to participate in a detailed telephone interview. Data
from 1,510 individuals aged 18-60 years who did not have medical or psychiatric conditions
that could explain their severe fatigue were analyzed. Common factor analyses identified
three correlated factors (defined as "fatigue-mood-cognition" symptoms,
"flu-type" symptoms, and "visual impairment") that explained the
correlations among fatigue lasting for > or =6 months and 14 interrelated symptoms. No
factor explained the correlations among fatigue lasting for 1-5 months and other symptoms.
The combination of fatigue of > or =6 months' duration and selected symptoms overlaps
with published criteria used to define cases of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Although
symptoms described in this study were reported as appearing within the preceding month,
and CFS symptoms must have been present for the previous 6 months, these results provide
empirical support for the interrelations among unexplained fatigue of > or =6 months'
duration and symptoms included in the CFS case definition. PMID: 9663406, UI: 98326539
Semin Arthritis Rheum 1998 Jun;27(6):348-59 A possible role for saliva as a diagnostic
fluid in patients with chronic pain. Fischer HP, Eich W, Russell IJ
Ruprecht-Karls-Universitat Heidelberg, Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik, Germany. OBJECTIVES: The focus of this review was on proteins and
peptides found in saliva. Of greatest interest were those neuropeptides relevant to
nociception and to the pathogenesis of chronic pain syndromes. An additional goal was to
develop a standardized protocol to collect saliva for laboratory assessment. METHODS: Data
were obtained through discussion with experts at the medical schools in San Antonio and
Heidelberg and a Medline literature search involving all relevant studies from 1966 to
1997. The literature search was based on the following key terms: saliva, serotonin,
neuropeptide, substance P (SP), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), and nerve growth
factor (NGF). RESULTS: The mean concentration of SP in the saliva of healthy normal
controls ranged from 9.6 to 220 pg/mL. Generally, the concentration of SP was
approximately three times higher in saliva than in plasma. In a number of painful
conditions, particularly tension headache, substantial elevations of salivary SP were
found. Mean values for salivary CGRP in healthy controls were approximately 22 pmol/L and
were significantly elevated in patients with migraine attacks or cluster headache. There
were no data to indicate prior quantitative determination of NGF in human saliva.
CONCLUSIONS: After sampling and processing techniques have been standardized, measurement
of neuropeptides in human saliva could provide a valuable tool for study of patients with
chronic painful disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, and even
fibromyalgia syndrome. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9662753, UI:
98327255
J Orofac Pain 1998 Winter;12(1):35-41 Comparison of clinical and psychologic features
of fibromyalgia and masticatory myofascial pain. Cimino R, Michelotti A, Stradi R,
Farinaro C Department of Orthodontics, School of Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine,
University of Naples, Federico II, Italy. The aim of this study was to
investigate common symptoms and divergent features in fibromyalgia (FS) and masticatory
myofascial pain (MFP) in patients affected by craniomandibular disorders. Twenty-three
women with MFP and 23 women with FS were studied. All patients were examined by a dentist
and by a rheumatologist. Craniomandibular disorders were assessed with a subjective
symptoms questionnaire, detailed history interview, joint function examination, and manual
palpation of masticatory and cervical muscles. The Middlesex Hospital Questionnaire was
used to obtain personality profiles of the patients. The craniomandibular disorders
questionnaire revealed various similarities in the two groups, the most striking of which
were pain during mandibular function, articular noises, and headache. Both groups had
muscle pain upon palpation; the mean scores (on a 0 to 4 scale) did not differ
significantly between the two groups and ranged between 1.39 (SD 1.2) and 2.86 (SD 0.75).
The mean value of active mouth opening was 40.9 mm (SD 9.1) in MFP patients and 44.6 mm
(SD 7.2) in FS patients, while the mean value of passive opening was 49.6 mm (SD 6.0) in
MFP patients and 49.8 mm (SD 3.5) in FS patients. These values did not differ
significantly between the two groups, but did differ from the normal population, similar
to the trend of the psychologic profile. The authors conclude that the physician should be
alert to the need to conduct interdisciplinary evaluations in the diagnosis and management
of FS and of MFP. PMID: 9656897, UI: 98321053
Br J Rheumatol 1998 May;37(5):491-5 Prevalence of the major rheumatic disorders in the
adult population of north Pakistan. Farooqi A, Gibson T Department of Rheumatology and
Physical Medicine, Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, Islamabad. The
prevalence of rheumatic diseases in developing countries is largely unknown. Studies which
allow comparison of data within the contrasting communities of the Third World and the
developed world have the potential to provide insights into disease aetiologies. The
current study compared the frequency of rheumatic symptoms (point prevalence) amongst 1997
adults distributed evenly between poor rural and poor urban communities and relatively
affluent urban people. Comparisons were also made with similarly but previously derived
prevalence rates of rheumatic symptoms and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in south Pakistan and
Pakistanis in England. A significantly higher prevalence of joint pain was seen in the
north compared with the south. RA was more common in the north and similar to the
frequency amongst Pakistanis resident in England. Ethnic and genetic susceptibility might
have accounted for this. There was significantly more soft-tissue rheumatism and back pain
in the northern rural population compared with those in the city. Fibromyalgia was almost
completely absent from the urban affluent, but osteoarthritis of the knee was
significantly more common in this community, perhaps due to relative obesity. RA was least
in the urban poor, a phenomenon that might be attributable to earlier death of females or
other undetermined factors. PMID: 9651074, UI: 98313094
Cas Lek Cesk 1998 May 18;137(10):295-8 [Chronic fatigue syndrome]. [Article in Czech]
Litzman J, Lokaj J, Fucikova T Ustav klinicke imunologie a alergologie, FN u svate Anny,
Brno, Praha. A great concern is recently given to the chronic fatigue
syndrome in the Czech Republic. Unfortunately, published data allow us to state neither
the etiologic agent nor the pathophysiology of the disease. Although many authors
published various laboratory abnormalities, these changes are inconstant and do not allow
to state a diagnosis of the chronic fatigue syndrome by a single laboratory test, and
effective therapy is not known either. Psychotherapy, and in some cases antidepressants,
are recommended by some authors to alleviate patient's symptoms. Neither immunological nor
antiviral therapy showed positive results in controlled trials and are not generally used
in most centers. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9650359, UI: 98314045
Behav Res Ther 1998 May;36(5):527-35 Private body consciousness, anxiety and pain
symptom reports of chronic pain patients. Ferguson RJ, Ahles TA Department of Psychiatry,
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA.
robert.j.ferguson@dartmouth.edu An information processing model of pain
symptom perception and reporting predicts that individuals prone to high levels of
attentional self-focus and negative affect will report more pain than individuals low in
these characteristics. Past research on college student and medical patient samples has
shown that individuals high in private body consciousness (PBC), or attentional self-focus
and who report higher levels of anxiety report more pain symptoms than counterparts low in
PBC and anxiety. The present study examined effects of PBC and anxiety on pain reports of
individuals suffering chronic pain (N = 144). Pain patients suffering chronic headache,
low back pain, rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia were included in the sample. A
non-pain control sample (N = 31) was also studied to examine potential differences between
controls and pain patients. Results indicated that pain patients reporting high levels of
PBC reported more pain, although the effects of anxiety on pain reports among pain
patients was not significant. Controls did not differ from pain patients on PBC, nor did
the 4 groups of pain patients differ on PBC, suggesting PBC is a dispositional variable.
Implications for the importance of attentional self-focus in pain symptom reporting are
discussed. PMID: 9648328, UI: 98312134
Clin J Pain 1998 Jun;14(2):107-15 Social context of pain in children with Juvenile
Primary Fibromyalgia Syndrome: parental pain history and family environment. Schanberg LE,
Keefe FJ, Lefebvre JC, Kredich DW, Gil KM Department of Pediatrics, Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to describe parental pain history and
the family environment as it relates to the functional status of children with Juvenile
Primary Fibromyalgia Syndrome (JPFS). DESIGN AND OUTCOME MEASURES: Twenty-nine parents of
children with JPFS completed a pain history questionnaire, Von Korff Chronic Pain Grading
system, and the Family Environment Scale (FES). Twenty-one adolescents with JPFS completed
the FES, the Visual Analogue Scale for Pain, the modified Fibromyalgia Impact
Questionnaire for Children, the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scales, and the Symptom
Checklist-90-Revised. Correlational analyses were performed. RESULTS: Parents of children
with JPFS reported multiple chronic pain conditions, including but not limited to
fibromyalgia. Parental pain history and the family environment correlated with the health
status of adolescents with JPFS. Children with JPFS perceived the family environment as
significantly more cohesive than did their parents. Greater incongruence between parent
and child responses on the FES positively correlated with greater impairment. CONCLUSIONS:
These results suggest that family environment and parental pain history ay be related to
how children cope with JPFS. Behavioral interventions targeting the family may improve the
long-term functional status of children with JPFS. PMID: 9647451, UI: 98309666
Pathobiology 1998;66(2):53-8 Cellular sequences in stealth viruses. Martin WJ Center
for Complex Infectious Diseases, Rosemead, Calif 91770, USA. Cloned DNA obtained from the culture of an African green monkey simian
cytomegalovirus-derived stealth virus contains multiple discrete regions of significant
sequence homology (p values ranging from 4 x 10(-3) to 1 x 10(-20)) to portions of known
human cellular genes. The stealth virus was cultured from a patient with chronic fatigue
syndrome (CFS). Earlier studies had revealed considerable sequence heterogeneity within
DNA fragments isolated from virus-infected cells. A set of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
primers generated different PCR products when tested on stealth virus cultures from 4
patients with CFS. Several of the PCR products also contain regions of significant partial
homology to distinct cellular sequences, including sequences repetitively expressed
throughout the cellular genome. Stealth viruses may play an important role in the origins
and in the genetic diversity of both viral and cellular sequences. PMID: 9645627, UI:
98307534
Clin Rheumatol 1998;17(2):89-94 A randomised double-blind 16-week study of ritanserin
in fibromyalgia syndrome: clinical outcome and analysis of autoantibodies to serotonin,
gangliosides and phospholipids. Olin R, Klein R, Berg PA Department of
Infectious Diseases, Huddinge Hospital, Karolska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. The aim of the study was to evaluate in a double-blind manner the effect
of the long-acting 5-hydroxytryptamine 2 (5-HT2)-receptor blocker Ritanserin on clinical
symptoms in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FM) and on production of antibodies to
serotonin, gangliosides and phospholipids, recently shown to have a high incidence in this
disease. Fifty-one female patients with typical FM were included in the 16-week study: 24
received Ritanserin and 27 received a placebo. Antibodies to 5-HT, gangliosides (Gm1) and
phospholipids (thromboplastin) were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay at day
0 and at the end of week 16. The psychological and physical status, including tender
points, of the patients was evaluated at day 0 and at the end of weeks 4 and 16. At the
end of the study, there was an improvement (p < 0.05) in feeling refreshed in the
morning in the Ritanserin-treated group and headache was also significantly improved
compared with the placebo group. There was no difference in pain, fatigue, sleep, morning
stiffness, anxiety and tender point counts in the Ritanserin and placebo groups. Fifty-one
per cent of the 51 patients had at least one of the three antibodies to 5-HT, Gm1 and
phospholipids. The incidence and activity of these antibodies were not influenced by
Ritanserin or placebo. The observation that Ritanserin has only a small effect on clinical
symptoms indicates that disturbances in serotonin metabolism or uptake may be only one
factor in the pathogenesis of the disease. The high incidence of a defined autoantibody
pattern in FM could again be confirmed in this study. However, it remains speculative
whether immunological reactions are, indeed, involved. Publication Types: Clinical trial
Randomized controlled trial PMID: 9641502, UI: 98303204
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):405-12 Current concepts in the
pathophysiology of abnormal pain perception in fibromyalgia. Weigent DA, Bradley LA,
Blalock JE, Alarcon GS Department of Medicine, The University of Alabama at Birmingham,
35294, USA. Fibromyalgia is a noninflammatory rheumatic disorder
characterized by chronic widespread musculoskeletal pain. Although many studies have
described the pain and other clinical symptoms associated with this disorder, the primary
mechanisms underlying the etiology of fibromyalgia remain elusive. This article reviews
recent data supporting the links among each of three systems--the musculoskeletal system,
the neuroendocrine system, and the central nervous system (CNS), all of which appear to
play major roles in fibromyalgia pathophysiology--and pain in fibromyalgia, and concludes
by presenting a model of the pathophysiology of abnormal pain perception in fibromyalgia
which integrates the research findings described. Publication Types: Review Review,
tutorial PMID: 9638897, UI: 98300768
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):397-404 Advances in the treatment of fibromyalgia: current
status and future directions. Alarcon GS, Bradley LA Division of Clinical Immunology and
Rheumatology and the Multipurpose Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases Center, The
University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35294, USA. graciela.alacron@ccc.uab.edu Despite significant efforts devoted to understanding the etiopathogenesis of
fibromyalgia, its treatment still presents a challenge to practicing clinicians, who must
recognize the disorder and quantify the different symptoms in order to treat it. This
article discusses recent research to identify sensitive and reliable measures for
determining response to treatment among patients with FM, and the elements of therapeutic
programs (pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic) for patients with FM along with the
empirical or theoretical basis for their use. Future directions, including the need for
systematic, controlled outcome studies of therapies and evaluation of variables which may
mediate the effects of treatment, as well as demonstration that the effects produced in
outcome studies generalize to settings beyond those in which the studies are initially
conducted, are also discussed. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638896,
UI: 98300767
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):385-96 Abnormal functional activity of
the central nervous system in fibromyalgia syndrome. Mountz JM, Bradley LA, Alarcon GS
Department of Radiology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35233, USA.
jmmountz@uab.edu The evaluation of pain is one of the major problems facing
general practitioners and specialists in medicine. Although the source of pain can be
usually be traced to specific abnormalities in a given organ system, some patients present
with generalized pain syndromes, such as fibromyalgia, for which no specific source can be
found. Some researchers have begun to consider that although there may be a somatic source
of such pain at its initiation, over time the pain may be maintained or exacerbated by
functional alterations in critical regions of the brain and spinal cord that are involved
in pain processing or pain inhibition. This article describes the techniques currently
used to measure regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in the brain by single photon emission
computed tomography (SPECT) imaging, and reviews the SPECT and positron emission
tomography literature concerning alterations in functional brain activity associated with
pain in healthy individuals and in patients with chronic pain, including those with
fibromyalgia. The article concludes by describing the implications of current knowledge
about pain and abnormal functional brain activity in the understanding of the
pathophysiology of fibromyalgia and in the development of therapeutic strategies to manage
patients with this disorder. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638895, UI:
98300766
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):377-84 Advances in fibromyalgia:
possible role for central neurochemicals. Russell IJ Department of Medicine, The
University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio 78284-7868, USA. The
neurophysiologic term allodynia has been applied to fibromyalgia because people with that
disorder experience pain from pressure stimuli which are not normally painful. The
nociceptive neurotransmitters of animal studies are now relevant to this human model of
chronic, widespread pain. Evidence is presented to implicate several chemical pain
mediators (including serotonin, substance P, nerve growth factor, and dynorphin A) in the
pathogenesis of fibromyalgia. This perception is hopeful because it offers many new
options for the development of innovative therapy. Publication Types: Review Review,
tutorial PMID: 9638894, UI: 98300765
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):367-76 Sleep in fibromyalgia
patients: subjective and objective findings. Harding SM Sleep/Wake Disorders Center,
University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35294, USA. harding@pulm.dom.uab.edu Fibromyalgia
(FM) patients report early morning awakenings, awakening feeling tired or unrefreshed,
insomnia, as well as mood and cognitive disturbances; they may also experience primary
sleep disorders including sleep apnea. Longitudinal studies have demonstrated the chronic
nature of these disturbances in patients with FM. A distinct relationship exists between
poor sleep quality and pain intensity. Polysomnographic findings during sleep in these
patients include an alpha frequency rhythm, termed alpha-delta sleep anomaly, which is
also seen in normal controls during stage 4 sleep deprivation; deep pain induced during
sleep in normal controls also causes this anomaly. Sleep architecture is altered in FM
patients showing an increase in stage 1, a reduction in delta sleep, and an increased
number of arousals. Before prescribing pharmacologic compounds aimed at modifying sleep,
adequate pain control and sleep habits should be achieved; tricyclic antidepressants,
trazadone, zopiclone, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, however, may be
required. More research is needed to elucidate the cellular and molecular mechanisms
involved in the sleep disturbances occurring in patients with FM. Publication Types:
Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638893, UI: 98300764
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):359-66 Neuroendocrine abnormalities in
fibromyalgia and related disorders. Crofford LJ Department of Internal Medicine,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-0680, USA. Fibromyalgia (FM) and
related syndromes are poorly understood disorders that share symptoms such as pain,
fatigue, sleep disturbances, and psychological distress. These syndromes are more common
in women, and they are associated with psychological or physical stressors. The
neuroendocrine axes are essential physiologic systems that allow for communication between
the brain and the body. Interconnections among the neuroendocrine axes lead to coordinate
regulation of these systems in both a positive and negative fashion. Several
neuroendocrine axes have been shown to be dysfunctional in patients with FM. Although we
do not yet understand the relationship between the reported disturbances of neuroendocrine
function and the development or maintenance of FM and related syndromes, the authors have
proposed that these abnormalities are important in symptomatic manifestations. This
article reviews data showing disturbances of the neuroendocrine axes in FM and proposes a
hypothesis of the development and maintenance of FM related to neuroendocrine
disturbances. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638892, UI: 98300763
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):351-8 Skeletal muscle abnormalities in
patients with fibromyalgia. Olsen NJ, Park JH Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt
University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA. nancy.olsen@mcmail.vanderbilt.edu Widespread muscle pain and tender points are the most common complaints of
fibromyalgia patients, and the underlying mechanisms responsible for these symptoms have
been studied intensively during the past decade. It has been suggested that fatigue and
pain may lead to decreased levels of physical activity in many patients. The resulting
deconditioned state may itself contribute to muscle abnormalities. Associated symptoms
such as disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, or irritable bowel also may have a negative
impact on muscle function and level of daily activities. The important interactions
between the central nervous and musculoskeletal systems may involve another element, the
neuroendocrine stress-response system. This review will consider both the current state of
knowledge and also future studies which might be designed to answer more effectively the
outstanding questions regarding the underlying pathogenesis of fibromyalgia. Publication
Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638891, UI: 98300762
Am J Med Sci 1998 Jun;315(6):346-50 Fibromyalgia is not a muscle
disorder. Simms RW Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine,
Massachusetts 02118, USA. rsimms@med-med1.bu.edu Originally described as
"fibrositis," fibromyalgia has long been considered a muscle disorder, and many
studies have investigated the possible pathologic basis of the disorder by examining
muscle tissue, using various methodologic approaches. Although initial studies suggested a
possible pathologic basis in muscle, most had serious methodologic limitations. More
recent studies, however, have avoided methodologic pitfalls and indicate that the muscles
of patients with fibromyalgia are normal. When data from studies of tenderness are also
taken into account, the weight of evidence suggests that fibromyalgia is a chronic pain
syndrome which has a central rather than peripheral or muscular basis. Publication Types:
Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9638890, UI: 98300761
Med Confl Surviv 1998 Apr-Jun;14(2):156-65 Gulf War illnesses: complex medical,
scientific and political paradox. Nicolson GL, Nicolson NL Institute for Molecular
Medicine, Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1041, USA. gnicimm@ix.netcom.com Gulf War illnesses are a collection of disorders that for the most part can be
diagnosed and treated, if effective programmes exist to assist veterans, and in some cases
their immediate family members. Although these illnesses are complex and have multi-organ
signs and symptoms, a proportion of these patients can be identified as having Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) and/or Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS).
Although there are many possible causes of CSF/ME/FMS, chronic infections can explain, at
least in a subset of patients, the apparent transmission of these illnesses to family
members and the appearance of chronic, multi-organ and auto-immune signs and symptoms.
Unfortunately, many veterans who have been diagnosed with chronic infections, such as
mycoplasmal infections, cannot obtain adequate treatment for their condition, resulting in
their reliance on private physicians and clinics for assistance. This lack of response may
ultimately be responsible for the transmission of the illness to non-veterans. PMID:
9633269, UI: 98296925
J Rheumatol 1998 Jun;25(6):1180-6 The effects of delta wave sleep
interruption on pain thresholds and fibromyalgia-like symptoms in healthy subjects;
correlations with insulin-like growth factor I. Older SA, Battafarano DF, Danning CL, Ward
JA, Grady EP, Derman S, Russell IJ Department of Medicine, Brooke Army Medical Center,
Fort Sam Houston, Texas 78234-6272, USA. OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects
of delta wave sleep interruption (DWSI) on pain thresholds and fibromyalgia-like symptoms.
To examine the potential correlations between DWSI and serum insulin-like growth factor 1
(IGF-1). METHODS: Thirteen healthy volunteers were subjected to 3 consecutive nights of
DWSI (Group 1). Pain thresholds were measured by dolorimetry and symptoms by visual analog
scale. Six subjects not undergoing DWSI served as dolorimetry and symptom controls (Group
2). Serum IGF-1 was measured by competitive binding radioimmunoassay before and after
DWSI. RESULTS: No significant differences in pain thresholds as a function of condition
(baseline, DWSI, recovery) or overnight change were detected between or within groups
(p>0.05). Morning mean dolorimeter scores were lower than evening scores in both groups
during all 3 conditions, and were lower in Group 1 than in Group 2 during DWSI. Group 1
subjects had higher composite symptom scores during DWSI (p< or =0.005), attributed
largely to increases in fatigue. Serum levels of IGF-1 from Group 1 subjects showed no
significant change after DWSI (p>0.05). CONCLUSION: In our study subjects, 3 nights of
DWSI caused no significant lowering of pain thresholds compared with a control group.
Subjects appeared to have lower pain thresholds in the mornings, and DWSI appeared to
augment this effect. Symptoms were more apparent during DWSI, but were primarily related
to fatigue. IGF-1 was not altered by 3 nights of DWSI. The low levels of IGF-1 seen in
patients with fibromyalgia syndrome may result from chronic rather than acute DWSI, or may
be dependent on factors other than disturbances of delta wave sleep. PMID: 9632083, UI:
98293844
Clin Exp Rheumatol 1998 May-Jun;16(3):305-8 Tuberculous spondylitis as a
cause of inflammatory spinal pain: a report of 4 cases. Cantini F, Salvarani C, Olivieri
I, Niccoli L, Padula A, Bellandi F, Palchetti R Unita Reumatologica, II Divisione di
Medicina Interna, Ospedale di Prato, Italy. Patients are said to have inflammatory spinal
pain if they fulfill at presentation 4 of the following 5 criteria: duration of spinal
discomfort for at least 3 months, spinal morning stiffness, age less than 40, insidious
onset of symptoms, and no relief from pain with rest, but improvement with exercise.
Inflammatory spinal pain is typical of the spondylarthropathies. Only in a minority of the
cases it is found in other rheumatic disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia
or infectious spondyilitis. Tuberculous spondylitis is rarely mentioned as a possible
cause of inflammatory spinal pain. We describe 4 patients with tuberculous spondylitis
seen over a 3-year period who met the clinical criteria for inflammatory spinal pain at
presentation. We conclude that inflammatory spinal pain may be a presenting feature,
albeit rare, of tuberculous spondylitis. Awareness of this finding should help facilitate
the proper diagnosis and the institution of appropriate therapy. PMID: 9631755, UI:
98295250
Neuromuscul Disord 1998 May;8(3-4):204-9 Heterogeneity in chronic fatigue syndrome:
evidence from magnetic resonance spectroscopy of muscle. Lane RJ, Barrett MC, Taylor DJ,
Kemp GJ, Lodi R Division of Clinical Neuroscience and Psychological Medicine, Imperial
College School of Medicine, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK. r.lane@cxwms.ac.uk It has been shown previously that some patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome show an abnormal increase in plasma lactate following a short
period of moderate exercise, in the sub-anaerobic threshold exercise test (SATET). This
cannot be explained satisfactorily by the effects of 'inactivity' or 'deconditioning', and
patients with abnormal lactate responses to exercise (SATET +ve) have been found to have
significantly fewer Type 1 muscle fibres in quadriceps biopsies than SATET -ve patients.
We performed phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy on forearm muscles of 10 SATET +ve
patients, 9 SATET -ve patients and 13 sedentary volunteers. There were no differences in
resting spectra between these groups but at the end of exercise, intracellular pH in the
SATET +ve patients was significantly lower than in both the SATET -ve cases and controls
(P < 0.03), and the SATET +ve patients also showed a significantly lower ATP synthesis
rate during recovery (P < 0.01), indicating impaired mitochondrial oxidative
phosphorylation. These observations support other evidence which indicates that chronic
fatigue syndrome is a heterogeneous disorder, and confirms the view that some chronic
fatigue syndrome patients have a peripheral component to their fatigue. PMID: 9631403, UI:
98294864
Altern Med Rev 1998 Jun;3(3):187-98 The detoxification enzyme systems. Liska DJ
HealthComm International, Inc. P.O. Box 1729, Gig Harbor, WA 98335, USA.
deann@healthcomm.com The human body is exposed to a
wide array of xenobiotics in ones lifetime, from food components to environmental toxins
to pharmaceuticals, and has developed complex enzymatic mechanisms to detoxify these
substances. These mechanisms exhibit significant individual variability, and are affected
by environment, lifestyle, and genetic influences. The scientific literature suggests an
association between impaired detoxification and certain diseases, including cancer,
Parkinson's disease, fibromyalgia, and chronic fatigue/immune dysfunction syndrome. Data
regarding these hepatic detoxification enzyme systems and the body s mechanisms of
regulating them suggests the ability to efficiently detoxify and remove xenobiotics can
affect these and other chronic disease processes. This article reviews the myriad
detoxification enzyme systems, their regulatory mechanisms, and the dietary, lifestyle,
and genetic factors influencing their activities, as well as laboratory tests available to
assess their functioning. Publication Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9630736, UI:
98331853
Ann N Y Acad Sci 1998 May 1;840:684-97 Evidence for and
pathophysiologic implications of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysregulation in
fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. Demitrack MA, Crofford LJ Lilly Research
Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285, USA. Chronic
fatigue syndrome (CFS) is characterized by profound fatigue and an array of diffuse
somatic symptoms. Our group has established that impaired activation of the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is an essential neuroendocrine feature of this
condition. The relevance of this finding to the pathophysiology of CFS is supported by the
observation that the onset and course of this illness is excerbated by physical and
emotional stressors. It is also notable that this HPA dysregulation differs from that seen
in melancholic depression, but shares features with other clinical syndromes (e.g.,
fibromyalgia). How the HPA axis dysfunction develops is unclear, though recent work
suggests disturbances in serotonergic neurotransmission and alterations in the activity of
AVP, an important co-secretagogue that, along with CRH, influences HPA axis function. In
order to provide a more refined view of the nature of the HPA dusturbance in patients with
CFS, we have studied the detailed, pulsatile characteristics of the HPA axis in a group of
patients meeting the 1994 CDC case criteria for CFS. Results of that work are consistent
with the view that patients with CFS have a reduction of HPA axis activity due, in part,
to impaired central nervous system drive. These observations provide an important clue to
the development of more effective treatment to this disabling condition. Publication
Types: Review Review, tutorial PMID: 9629295, UI: 98292940
Z Rheumatol 1998 Apr;57(2):89-94 [Interdisciplinary group therapy for fibromyalgia].
[Article in German] Strobel ES, Wild J, Muller W Park-Klinik Bad Kissingen. Fibromyalgia is present in 2% of the general population and leads to
impairment by chronic pain and fatigue. It does not improve without therapy directed at
the symptoms of fibromyalgia. We describe our interdisciplinary group treatment for
patients with fibromyalgia. They received a physical examination, ergometry and
psychometric tests both at admission and before discharge, and they were questioned to the
degree and localization of their pain, to fatigue, sleeping disorders and functional
symptoms. Therapy included information about fibromyalgia, learning of coping strategies,
relaxation and endurance training. Our results show that our interdisciplinary group
treatment is effective for fibromyalgia and improves anxiety, depression and well being
after a period of 5 weeks of in-patient rehabilitation. PMID: 9627947, UI: 98291417
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 1998 Apr;52(2):234-235; Clinical
characteristics of circadian rhythm sleep disorders. Kamei Y, Urata J, Uchiyaya M,
Hayakawa T, Ozaki S, Shibui K, Okawa M; Department of Psychiatry, Kohnodai Hospital,
National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Chiba, Japan.
From our practice at the sleep disorders clinic in Kohnodai
Hospital, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry (NCNP), we report the clinical
characteristics of circadian sleep-wake rhythm disorders. Nearly 90% of circadian rhythm
sleep disorders were diagnosed as delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) or as non-24
sleep-wake syndrome (non-24). While DSPS was equally common in males and females, non-24
was more frequently seen in men. It was of psychiatric interest that a considerable number
of patients had depressive states in the course of their circadian rhythm sleep disorders.
Difficulty in adapting to social life was more severe in patients with non-24 than in
those with DSPS.
Holist Nurs Pract 1998 Apr;12(3):55-63; Fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue: the
holistic perspective. Kenner C; Department of Parent-Child Health Nursing, College of
Nursing and Health University of Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) are not new conditions, but they are receiving more
attention as more research is conducted. These two conditions are primarily women's health
problems. In some instances, there may be a genetic predisposition for these conditions.
The impact of FMS and CFS can be devastating both physically and emotionally. The
treatment plan must be interdisciplinary and holistic and include alternative therapies if
the client and family are to be truly supported and helped in coping with these chronic
conditions.
Br J Rheumatol 1998 Apr;37(4):382-386; The association of soft-tissue rheumatism
and hypermobility. Hudson N, Fitzcharles MA, Cohen M, Starr MR, Esdaile JM; Rheumatic
Disease Unit, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Soft-tissue rheumatism
(STR--tendinitis, bursitis, fasciitis and fibromyalgia) accounts for up to 25% of
referrals to rheumatologists. The estimated prevalence of generalized hypermobility in the
adult population is 5-15%. There have previously been suggestions that hypermobile
individuals may be predisposed to soft-tissue trauma and subsequent musculoskeletal pain.
This study was designed to examine the mobility status and physical activity level in
consecutive rheumatology clinic attendees with a primary diagnosis of STR. Of 82 patients
up to age 70 yr with STR, 29 (35%) met criteria for generalized hypermobility. Hypermobile
compared to non-hypermobile individuals reported significantly more previous episodes of
STR (90% vs 51%, P < 0.01), and more recurrent episodes of STR at a single site (69% vs
38, P < 0.001). Although we were unable to show any difference in the time spent
carrying out physical activity between the two groups, the hypermobile patients were
performing significantly more repetitive activities. When specific anatomical sites of STR
were analysed, small joints (elbows, hands and feet) currently affected with STR were more
likely to show localized hypermobility than if those joints were asymptomatic. These
findings suggest that hypermobility may be a factor in the development of STR. Repetitive
activity may be a contributing factor towards STR in some hypermobile individuals.
Br J Med Psychol 1998 Jun;71( Pt 2):185-194; The role of anxiety and depression
in fatigue and patterns of pain among subgroups of fibromyalgia patients. Kurtze N,
Gundersen KT, Svebak S; North-Troendelag Research Institute, Steinkjer, Norway.
This study explored the
relationship of anxiety and depression with two major symptoms of fibromyalgia, pain and
fatigue, among fibromyalgia patients (N = 322). Due to collinearity between anxiety and
depression scores, extreme groups were defined according to high versus low anxiety and
depression scores. Two-thirds of the initial sample were excluded by this approach, which
permitted a two by two factorial split-plot ANOVA for the assessment of main effects and
the interaction of anxiety and depression upon pain and fatigue. Results stated
independent, additive, effects of anxiety and depression upon levels of pain and fatigue,
whereas interaction between anxiety and depression failed to significantly explain symptom
differences among the participants. Correlational analyses indicated widespread pain among
the low anxiety subgroups. In contrast, widespread pain was not indicated among anxious
patients with low scores on depression. The findings support the hypothesis that (1)
anxiety and depression are independently associated with severity of pain symptoms in
fibromyalgia, and that (2) patients with high anxiety and low depression may communicate
to the medical doctor in ways that involve a risk of diagnosing fibromyalgia when the
criterion of widespread pain is not supported. These conclusions were confirmed by results
from ANCOVAs that permitted more extensive control of collinearity among variables.
Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova 1998;98(4):40-43; [Treatment of
fibromyalgia]. Tabeeva GR, Levin IaI, Korotkova SB, Khanunov IG
The paper reports the results of
therapy of 23 patients with fibromyalgia (FM). Tetracyclic antidepressant lerivon, was
administered to group 1, nonsteroid antiinflammatory (NSAI) preparation nurofen to group 2
and phototherapy (exposure to bright white light) was used in group 3. Clinical effect in
the form of a decrease of both the intensivity of algesic syndrome and autonomic
manifestations as well as improvement of night sleep were clearly seen in group 1.
Manifestations of both anxious and depressive disorders were less pronounced. Treatment by
Nurofen resulted in slight decrease of intensivity of pains but didn't lead to pronounced
alterations of emotional sphere. Administration of either Lerivon or Nurofen promoted the
increase of pain thresholds (according to the data of nociceptive flexory reflex). The
data obtained testified the necessity of complex therapy of FM patients including
administration of antidepressants and analgetic drugs of NSAI group. Dynamic
polysomnographic examination of patients from group 3 revealed the increase of total sleep
duration, decrease of the time of falling asleep, the latent period of the phase of the
fast sleep, activated movement index, intensivity of movements and the time of being awake
in the sleep. The conclusion was made that it was worth while to use phototherapy as
alternative, nonmedicine method of phothotherapy.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Res 1998;18(1):13-19; Tramadol in the fibromyalgia
syndrome: a controlled clinical trial versus placebo. Biasi G, Manca S, Manganelli S,
Marcolongo R; Institute of Rheumatology, University of Siena, Polyclinic Le Scotte, Italy.
This study assessed the analgesic
action of tramadol compared with placebo in patients suffering from fibromyalgia syndrome.
Twelve patients (11 females, one male) were treated according to a double-blind crossover
experimental design. Each patient, after signing informed consent, was randomly allocated
to either tramadol (100 mg ampul in 100 ml given intravenously in 15 min doses) or placebo
for a single dose treatment. At the second visit, patients crossed over to the other drug
for a further single dose treatment. There was a wash-out period of 1 week. Nine patients
completed the study, while in three cases (two tramadol, one placebo) the study was
discontinued due to the onset of side effects. The assessment of efficacy, carried out at
the baseline and 15 min and 2 hours after administration of each dose, involved the use of
a visual analog scale (VAS 100 mm) for spontaneous pain and pressure dolorimetry (kg/cm2)
at 12 "symptomatic" tender points and nine "control" tender points for
fibromyalgic pain. During the first treatment cycle effective control of spontaneous pain
was achieved with tramadol, which determined a reduction of 20.6% while with the placebo
spontaneous pain increased by 19.8%. With pressure dolorimetry there were no clinically
important differences observed after either active treatment or placebo. The contrasting
results found in the present study could be a stimulus for the organization of new
projects, which may lead to the identification of an optimal therapeutic approach for
fibromyalgic patients, also using tramadol for long periods.
Schweiz Rundsch Med Prax 1998 Apr 15;87(16):538-545; [No title available].
Kissel W, Mahnig P; MEDAS Zentralschweiz, Luzern.
MEDAS-agencies are medical
institutions within the Swiss Disability Insurance, which specialize in assessing the
working capacity of candidates who apply for a disability pension. Degenerative and other
chronic pain disorders of the musculoskeletal system form the majority of cases that we
investigate. Fibromyalgia is one of our most frequent diagnoses (8.6%). We become involved
in cases on average 8.5 years after the first onset of painful symptoms and on average 2.5
years after the patients have ceased to work. Our experience, tells us that fibromyalgia
is usually associated with psychological disturbances; thus our psychiatrists have found
important psychological problems in 86.7% of applicants. They found mainly neurotic and
depressive syndromes. Our investigations have shown that psychological disturbances
precede the onset of musculoskeletal pain in about 70% of patients. Therefore, we don't
consider fibromyalgia syndrome as an entity of its own, but regard it as a pain syndrome
in which there are underlying psychological problems in most cases.
Cleve Clin J Med 1998 May;65(5):261-266; The connection between chronic fatigue
syndrome and neurally mediated hypotension. Wilke WS, Fouad-Tarazi FM, Cash JM, Calabrese
LH; Department of Rheumatic and Immunologic Disease, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH
44195, USA.
Research from several groups of
investigators indicates that some patients with chronic fatigue syndrome have abnormal
vasovagal or vasodepressor responses to upright posture. If confirmed, these findings may
explain some of the symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome. There is also speculation that
neurally mediated hypotension may be present in fibromyalgia. This article discusses the
original research in this area, the results of follow-up studies, and the current approach
to treating patients with chronic fatigue syndrome in whom neurally mediated hypotension
is suspected.
J Rheumatol 1998 May;25(5):892-895; Fatigue in lupus is not correlated with
disease activity. Wang B, Gladman DD, Urowitz MB; University of Toronto Lupus Clinic,
Centre for Prognosis Studies in the Rheumatic Disease, The Toronto Hospital, Ontario,
Canada.
OBJECTIVE: The relationship between
fatigue and disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has been questioned. We
examined whether self-reported fatigue in patients with SLE is correlated with disease
activity. METHODS: Consecutive patients with SLE at the University of Toronto Lupus Clinic
were evaluated for disease activity using the Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease
Activity Index (SLEDAI). They were also evaluated for fibromyalgia (FM) by American
College of Rheumatology criteria. One hundred patients completed the following health
status questionnaires: the Fatigue Severity Score (FSS), Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression Scale (CES-D), and Medical Outcomes Study Short Form Health Survey (SF-20).
Disease activity was measured by the SLEDAI. Statistical correlations were made using the
Spearman test. RESULTS: No significant correlation was found between FSS scores and SLEDAI
(p = NS). Fatigue was found to be highly correlated with the presence of FM (p < 0.05)
and depression (p < 0.01). In addition, fatigue was significantly associated with lower
performance in all 6 domains of the SF-20 (p < 0.001); disease activity correlated with
decreases in social function, mental health, and health perception areas of the SF-20.
SLEDAI was not found to correlate with FM (p = NS). CONCLUSION: Fatigue in patients with
SLE does not correlate with disease activity. However, fatigue is correlated with FM,
depression, and lower overall health status in this population. Fatigue is a manifestation
of these conditions, which are commonly co-expressed in SLE, and may reflect a decreased
overall coping ability in these patients, rather than active disease itself.
J Rheumatol 1998 May;25(5):852-858; Quantitative rheumatology: a survey of
outcome measurement procedures in routine rheumatology outpatient practice in Canada.
Bellamy N, Kaloni S, Pope J, Coulter K, Campbell J; Department of Medicine, University of
Western Ontario, London, Canada.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the extent to which quantitative
clinical measurement is performed by rheumatologists in the longitudinal followup of
patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA), ankylosing spondylitis (AS),
and fibromyalgia (FM) in routine outpatient practice in Canada. METHODS: A cross sectional
postal survey was conducted using an 18 item self-administered questionnaire sent to
Canadian Rheumatology Association members. RESULTS: Rheumatologists (response rate 85%)
were more likely to longitudinally follow patients with RA and AS than those with OA or
FM. There was a high degree of variability in the methods used to monitor patients
longitudinally. Many measures used in clinical research were used infrequently in routine
clinical practice. In general, the major health status measures surveyed were not used in
clinical monitoring. There was a high level of agreement (>80%) that the
characteristics required of an outcome measure for use in clinical practice should include
simplicity, brevity, ease of scoring, reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change.
CONCLUSION: The majority of Canadian rheumatologists perform outcome measurement during
the longitudinal followup of their outpatients with RA, AS, OA, and FM. However, the
process lacks standardization. High performance health status measures, developed for
clinical research, have not been widely adopted in rheumatology practices. There is
agreement on the characteristics required by Canadian rheumatologists for measurement
procedures used in routine clinical care. Quantitative measurement in clinical practice
using standardized procedures is an attainable, but as yet, unrealized opportunity.
J Neurol Sci 1998 Jan 21;154(1):18-25; Alteration of
spatial-temporal parameters of gait in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients. Saggini R,
Pizzigallo E, Vecchiet J, Macellari V, Giacomozzi C; Institute of Medical Pathophysiology,
University G. D'Annunzio, Chieti, Italy.
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) has been widely studied and
a lot of information is available in the literature regarding the immunological,
virological, neuroendocrinal and psychiatric aspects of the disease, but its aetiology is
still poorly understood. Great attention has also been paid to the alteration of the
muscular function caused by CFS. The aim of the present work was to study CFS patients'
gait in order to find out objective measures which can better characterize the pathology.
Spatial and temporal parameters of gait were collected from a group of 12 CFS informed
volunteers by using the typical instrumentation of movement analysis, and raw data were
statistically elaborated. Comparisons with reference data from a population of healthy
subjects revealed significant abnormalities in the symmetry indices of the bilateral
parameters and in the linear relationships among parameters, and between these parameters
and the physical characteristics of the patients. Interestingly, the abnormalities were
present as from the beginning of the gait, which indicates that they are unlikely to be
caused by the rapid increasing fatigue. This strengthens the hypothesis of a direct
involvement of the central nervous system (CNS) in the onset of the disease.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci 1998 Jan;33(1):61-71; The effects of nutritional
supplements on the symptoms of fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. Dykman KD, Tone
C, Ford C, Dykman RA; Mannatech Inc., Coppell Texas 75019, USA.
This article reports the results of
a within-subject design. Fifty subjects with a physician diagnosis of fibromyalgia (FM)
and/or chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) were interviewed using a structured interview from.
Each subject was interviewed initially, and again nine months later (follow-up). Subjects
had, on their own, consumed nutritional supplements including freeze-dried aloe vera gel
extract; a combination of freeze-dried aloe vera gel extract and additional plant-derived
saccharides; freeze-dried fruits and vegetables in combination with the saccharides; and a
formulation of dioscorea complex containing the saccharides and a vitamin/mineral complex.
With medical treatments, approximately 25 percent of FM patients improve, but t |