Guest guest Posted December 17, 2003 Report Share Posted December 17, 2003 Future of Fibromyalgia http://www.ivanhoe.com/story/p_playagain.cfm SEATTLE (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by extreme pain and muscle stiffness. It strikes 5 million to 10 million Americans. Fibromyalgia is often treated with anti-depressants, but newer, more targeted therapies may soon be available. For more than 20 years, Tross-Deamer suffered the pain of fibromyalgia. She started taking a new medication -- pregabalin -- and her pain subsided. “The memory is better. My relationships are better, " she says. " People like me a lot more. " For the first time in years, this wine author can sleep at night, giving her back energy and stamina during the day. Bernadine took a different drug -- milnacipran -- and had similar results. She says: “I didn’t have as much depression. I wasn’t as fatigued.” Rheumatologist Philip J. Mease, M.D., is testing both drugs in separate studies. “At least a third of the patients in both trials have experienced, roughly, a 50-percent reduction in pain,” he says. The drugs come from different families -- pregabalin is a pain reliever, milnacipran an anti-depressant. Dr. Mease, of Swedish Hospital Medical Center in Seattle, says, “What both of these medications are doing are restoring to a more natural balance the neuro-chemicals in the brain that are off kilter in this condition.” Both drugs are still in trials, but for these two women, the verdict is already in. The most common side effects in the pregabalin trial were mild dizziness, which went away as drug use continued. For milnacipran, it was nausea. Pregabalin could be approved next year. Milnacipran will likely be approved in two years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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