Guest guest Posted August 31, 2005 Report Share Posted August 31, 2005 a, thanks for this wonderful article. I hope and pray that there is a cure for this awful disease. I would tend to take issue with the " old school " view of us being hypersensitive, etc. I was a size 8, running 4 miles a day, playing softball & volleyball, not to mention having 4 kids, when I started having these baffling symptoms. If those who don't believe in FMS could spend a week in our bodies, they might have a little different perspective on things. However, I wouldn't wish a week of a FM flare on any one...you give us weapons in our battle against these disorders, and we all appreciate your time and dedication. Hugs from Jane > Fibromyalgia: Cure for a baffling disorder? > > The Los Angeles Times > > Monday, August 29, 2005 > > For years, pain, stiffness and fatigue clung to Armistead like > an invisible shroud. It was tough enough to live with fibromyalgia, > but the skepticism she encountered when she discussed her condition > was intolerable. > > " Throw out a word like fibromyalgia and you'll get this blank stare, " > the 28-year-old said recently, sitting in her Santa , Calif., > apartment. " For so long, it was my own private battle. " > > Today, however, Armistead is slowly, tentatively opening up about a > disease that is simultaneously emerging from its own mysterious black > box. > > A groundswell of research has begun to expose the underpinnings of > the baffling disorder, which affects an estimated 6 million to 10 > million Americans, most of them women. The findings not only have the > potential to ease the condition's stigma but also may provide clues > to other illnesses for which there is no clear clause. > > Fibromyalgia, experts now believe, is a pain-processing disorder that > arises in the brain and spinal cord and disrupts the ways the body > perceives and communicates pain. > > " There was a time when it was thought to be psychosomatic, " said Dr. > , a fibromyalgia expert at Oregon Health & Science > University in Portland. " We now understand the pain in fibromyalgia > is an abnormality in the central nervous system in which pain > sensations are amplified. " > > Now doctors are more likely to acknowledge fibromyalgia as a real > illness. Because patients are being diagnosed and referred to > specialists more quickly, they're finding relief, and acceptance, > easier to come by. > > Pharmaceutical companies have jumped on the new theory of the > disorder, too. The first prescription drug approved specifically for > fibromyalgia probably will be approved late next year or early in > 2007, and at least a half-dozen pharmaceutical companies are > developing other treatments. Meanwhile, the federal government is > funding 10 studies of the disease. > > " It's very rewarding, " said Dr. Stuart Silverman, medical director of > Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Fibromyalgia Rehab Program in Los > Angeles. " I was seeing patients before because no one else wanted to > see them. Patients would tell me, 'Everyone has told me there is > nothing I can do.' " > > Fibromyalgia typically is defined as unremitting pain in at least 11 > of 18 specific tender points in the body, accompanied by fatigue, > difficulties with concentration and other vague physical discomforts. > The illness is called a syndrome because the cluster of symptoms > lacks the clear markers of disease, such as changes in the blood or > organ function. > > Because patients often look healthy, doctors sometimes have diagnosed > fibromyalgia as a muscle problem or an autoimmune disorder. It also > can be a " wastebasket " diagnosis, attached to people with > inexplicable pain problems. Some have even dismissed it as the > complaints of emotionally troubled women. > > Years seeking help > > Many fibromyalgia patients spend years seeking help for their > symptoms, even after receiving a diagnosis. Always athletic, > Armistead first experienced back pain when she was a child, but she > assumed the discomfort was a part of playing sports. > > However, by the time Armistead had joined the UCLA volleyball team in > the mid-'90s, she knew something was seriously wrong. After games, > she would be racked with pain. She sometimes took as many as 15 over- > the-counter pain pills a day. > > Coaches and trainers, alarmed at her use of painkillers, insisted > that she undergo medical tests. Armistead saw numerous doctors during > a yearlong span but got no answers. > > " Eventually everyone started doubting whether or not I was really in > pain, " she said. " My coach couldn't understand how I could play one > day and be bedridden the next. " > > Debilitated by pain and fatigue, Armistead quit the team and began to > cut back on classes. She lost 35 pounds in eight months. It was a > time in her life " so painful, I've tuned a lot of it out. " > > In 1996, however, a doctor diagnosed her problem as ankylosing > spondylitis, a type of arthritis affecting the spine, and fibromyalgia. > > Today Armistead takes an arthritis medication, two sleep medications, > vitamins and herbs. She undergoes acupuncture, exercises moderately > and works only a few hours each day doing freelance marketing. > > " With each passing year, I've accepted the cards I've been dealt, " > she said. " I'm not giving up. I keep trying new treatments. " > > Hormone treatment > > Armistead, like many fibromyalgia patients, is a long way from being > pain-free. But the new research on fibromyalgia's causes offers a > blueprint for more effective treatments. > > Fibromyalgia is now thought to arise from miscommunication among > nerve impulses in the central nervous system, in other words the > brain and spinal cord. This " central sensitization " theory is > described in detail this month in a supplement of the Journal of > Rheumatology. The neurons, which send messages to the brain, become > excitable, exaggerating the pain sensation, researchers have found. > > As a result, fibromyalgia patients feel intense pain when they should > feel only mild fatigue or discomfort, such as after hauling bags of > groceries. They sometimes feel pain even when there is no cause. > > " The pain of fibromyalgia is not occurring because of some injury or > inflammation of the muscles or joints, " said Dr. Clauw, a > fibromyalgia researcher and director of the Center for the > Advancement of Clinical Research at the University of Michigan. > " There is something wrong with the way the central nervous system is > processing pain from the peripheral tissues. It's over-amplifying the > pain. " > > Recent studies show multiple triggers for the amped-up response to > pain. Fibromyalgia patients have, for instance, elevated levels of > substance P, a neurotransmitter found in the spinal cord that is > involved in communicating pain signals. > > They also appear to have lower levels of substances that diminish the > pain sensation, such as the brain chemicals serotonin, norepinephrine > and dopamine. Growth hormone, which helps promote bone and muscle > repair, is also found in lower levels in fibromyalgia patients. > > Medications approved specifically for fibromyalgia will change > treatment dramatically, Silverman predicts. > > " Fibromyalgia will get a lot more respect, " he said. " People will > think there must be a disease if there is a medicine for it. It must > be treatable. " > > Others aren't so sure, however. Many questions about central pain > disorders remain, including why some people are afflicted and not > others; why symptoms can vary so widely among patients; and whether > the emerging chemical markers — high levels of substance P and low > levels of serotonin and norepinephrine — cause the exaggerated pain > or are its result. > > Doctors have doubts > > The central sensitization theory hasn't convinced everyone that > fibromyalgia is a real illness, said Dr. Nortin M. Hadler, a > professor of medicine, microbiology and immunology at the University > of North Carolina. > > It's possible that fibromyalgia patients simply have a different mind- > set, he said. They tend to catastrophize small burdens, exaggerate > minor discomforts and quickly lose hope. This psychic despair, he > said, can alter neurotransmitters and influence other central nervous > system functions. > > " Is central sensitization something we want to label as a > pathological process or is this something we are all capable of doing > if we prepare ourselves intellectually? " he said. > > This perception of fibromyalgia, while falling out of favor among > many doctors, nevertheless strikes a nerve in patients and among > doctors specializing in its treatment. > > Fibromyalgia patients are difficult to treat, requiring much time and > attention, said. Some patients never get better, although > about 80 percent improve with a dedicated treatment plan and > lifestyle modifications, he said. > > " There is no recipe for treating fibromyalgia patients. The > treatments have to be fully individualized, and that takes a lot of > time, " said. " Most patients aren't getting the treatment they > need. " > > > http://www.palmbeachpost.com/accent/content/accent/epaper/2005/08/29/ > a1d_fibro_lat_0829.html > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2005 Report Share Posted August 31, 2005 a, thanks for this wonderful article. I hope and pray that there is a cure for this awful disease. I would tend to take issue with the " old school " view of us being hypersensitive, etc. I was a size 8, running 4 miles a day, playing softball & volleyball, not to mention having 4 kids, when I started having these baffling symptoms. If those who don't believe in FMS could spend a week in our bodies, they might have a little different perspective on things. However, I wouldn't wish a week of a FM flare on any one...you give us weapons in our battle against these disorders, and we all appreciate your time and dedication. Hugs from Jane > Fibromyalgia: Cure for a baffling disorder? > > The Los Angeles Times > > Monday, August 29, 2005 > > For years, pain, stiffness and fatigue clung to Armistead like > an invisible shroud. It was tough enough to live with fibromyalgia, > but the skepticism she encountered when she discussed her condition > was intolerable. > > " Throw out a word like fibromyalgia and you'll get this blank stare, " > the 28-year-old said recently, sitting in her Santa , Calif., > apartment. " For so long, it was my own private battle. " > > Today, however, Armistead is slowly, tentatively opening up about a > disease that is simultaneously emerging from its own mysterious black > box. > > A groundswell of research has begun to expose the underpinnings of > the baffling disorder, which affects an estimated 6 million to 10 > million Americans, most of them women. The findings not only have the > potential to ease the condition's stigma but also may provide clues > to other illnesses for which there is no clear clause. > > Fibromyalgia, experts now believe, is a pain-processing disorder that > arises in the brain and spinal cord and disrupts the ways the body > perceives and communicates pain. > > " There was a time when it was thought to be psychosomatic, " said Dr. > , a fibromyalgia expert at Oregon Health & Science > University in Portland. " We now understand the pain in fibromyalgia > is an abnormality in the central nervous system in which pain > sensations are amplified. " > > Now doctors are more likely to acknowledge fibromyalgia as a real > illness. Because patients are being diagnosed and referred to > specialists more quickly, they're finding relief, and acceptance, > easier to come by. > > Pharmaceutical companies have jumped on the new theory of the > disorder, too. The first prescription drug approved specifically for > fibromyalgia probably will be approved late next year or early in > 2007, and at least a half-dozen pharmaceutical companies are > developing other treatments. Meanwhile, the federal government is > funding 10 studies of the disease. > > " It's very rewarding, " said Dr. Stuart Silverman, medical director of > Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Fibromyalgia Rehab Program in Los > Angeles. " I was seeing patients before because no one else wanted to > see them. Patients would tell me, 'Everyone has told me there is > nothing I can do.' " > > Fibromyalgia typically is defined as unremitting pain in at least 11 > of 18 specific tender points in the body, accompanied by fatigue, > difficulties with concentration and other vague physical discomforts. > The illness is called a syndrome because the cluster of symptoms > lacks the clear markers of disease, such as changes in the blood or > organ function. > > Because patients often look healthy, doctors sometimes have diagnosed > fibromyalgia as a muscle problem or an autoimmune disorder. It also > can be a " wastebasket " diagnosis, attached to people with > inexplicable pain problems. Some have even dismissed it as the > complaints of emotionally troubled women. > > Years seeking help > > Many fibromyalgia patients spend years seeking help for their > symptoms, even after receiving a diagnosis. Always athletic, > Armistead first experienced back pain when she was a child, but she > assumed the discomfort was a part of playing sports. > > However, by the time Armistead had joined the UCLA volleyball team in > the mid-'90s, she knew something was seriously wrong. After games, > she would be racked with pain. She sometimes took as many as 15 over- > the-counter pain pills a day. > > Coaches and trainers, alarmed at her use of painkillers, insisted > that she undergo medical tests. Armistead saw numerous doctors during > a yearlong span but got no answers. > > " Eventually everyone started doubting whether or not I was really in > pain, " she said. " My coach couldn't understand how I could play one > day and be bedridden the next. " > > Debilitated by pain and fatigue, Armistead quit the team and began to > cut back on classes. She lost 35 pounds in eight months. It was a > time in her life " so painful, I've tuned a lot of it out. " > > In 1996, however, a doctor diagnosed her problem as ankylosing > spondylitis, a type of arthritis affecting the spine, and fibromyalgia. > > Today Armistead takes an arthritis medication, two sleep medications, > vitamins and herbs. She undergoes acupuncture, exercises moderately > and works only a few hours each day doing freelance marketing. > > " With each passing year, I've accepted the cards I've been dealt, " > she said. " I'm not giving up. I keep trying new treatments. " > > Hormone treatment > > Armistead, like many fibromyalgia patients, is a long way from being > pain-free. But the new research on fibromyalgia's causes offers a > blueprint for more effective treatments. > > Fibromyalgia is now thought to arise from miscommunication among > nerve impulses in the central nervous system, in other words the > brain and spinal cord. This " central sensitization " theory is > described in detail this month in a supplement of the Journal of > Rheumatology. The neurons, which send messages to the brain, become > excitable, exaggerating the pain sensation, researchers have found. > > As a result, fibromyalgia patients feel intense pain when they should > feel only mild fatigue or discomfort, such as after hauling bags of > groceries. They sometimes feel pain even when there is no cause. > > " The pain of fibromyalgia is not occurring because of some injury or > inflammation of the muscles or joints, " said Dr. Clauw, a > fibromyalgia researcher and director of the Center for the > Advancement of Clinical Research at the University of Michigan. > " There is something wrong with the way the central nervous system is > processing pain from the peripheral tissues. It's over-amplifying the > pain. " > > Recent studies show multiple triggers for the amped-up response to > pain. Fibromyalgia patients have, for instance, elevated levels of > substance P, a neurotransmitter found in the spinal cord that is > involved in communicating pain signals. > > They also appear to have lower levels of substances that diminish the > pain sensation, such as the brain chemicals serotonin, norepinephrine > and dopamine. Growth hormone, which helps promote bone and muscle > repair, is also found in lower levels in fibromyalgia patients. > > Medications approved specifically for fibromyalgia will change > treatment dramatically, Silverman predicts. > > " Fibromyalgia will get a lot more respect, " he said. " People will > think there must be a disease if there is a medicine for it. It must > be treatable. " > > Others aren't so sure, however. Many questions about central pain > disorders remain, including why some people are afflicted and not > others; why symptoms can vary so widely among patients; and whether > the emerging chemical markers — high levels of substance P and low > levels of serotonin and norepinephrine — cause the exaggerated pain > or are its result. > > Doctors have doubts > > The central sensitization theory hasn't convinced everyone that > fibromyalgia is a real illness, said Dr. Nortin M. Hadler, a > professor of medicine, microbiology and immunology at the University > of North Carolina. > > It's possible that fibromyalgia patients simply have a different mind- > set, he said. They tend to catastrophize small burdens, exaggerate > minor discomforts and quickly lose hope. This psychic despair, he > said, can alter neurotransmitters and influence other central nervous > system functions. > > " Is central sensitization something we want to label as a > pathological process or is this something we are all capable of doing > if we prepare ourselves intellectually? " he said. > > This perception of fibromyalgia, while falling out of favor among > many doctors, nevertheless strikes a nerve in patients and among > doctors specializing in its treatment. > > Fibromyalgia patients are difficult to treat, requiring much time and > attention, said. Some patients never get better, although > about 80 percent improve with a dedicated treatment plan and > lifestyle modifications, he said. > > " There is no recipe for treating fibromyalgia patients. The > treatments have to be fully individualized, and that takes a lot of > time, " said. " Most patients aren't getting the treatment they > need. " > > > http://www.palmbeachpost.com/accent/content/accent/epaper/2005/08/29/ > a1d_fibro_lat_0829.html > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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