New research sheds light on mysterious fibromyalgia pain
By Karen Weintraub
Special for USA
TODAY
"Fibromyalgia affects 1% to 5% of Americans, mainly
women, but until recently, scientists had no idea what might be causing its
severe and mysterious pains. For decades, doctors told patients their agony was
imaginary, the result of emotional hysteria, not a physical ailment.But this
year, researchers finally began to get a handle on the condition.
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"What's happened is in 2013 there's been this absolute
explosion of papers," says neurologist Anne Louise Oaklander at Massachusetts
General Hospital
in Boston. "The whole view on
this has shifted.
"Oaklander published two studies this year showing that
half or more of the cases of fibromyalgia are really a little-known condition
affecting the nerves. People with this small-fiber neuropathy get faulty
signals from tiny nerves all over the body, including internal organs, causing
an odd constellation of symptoms from pain to sleep and digestive problems that
overlap with symptoms of fibromyalgia.
Neuroscientist Frank Rice and a team based at Albany
Medical College
also discovered that there are excessive nerve fibers lining the blood vessels
of the skin of fibromyalgia patients - removing any doubt that the condition is
physically real.
These fibers in the skin can sense blood flow and control
the dilation and constriction of vessels to regulate body temperature, Rice
says, as well as direct nutrients to muscles during exercise. Women have more
of these fibers than men, he says, perhaps explaining why they are much more
likely to get fibromyalgia.
"Blood vessel nerve fibers are an important target that
haven't been in our line of thinking to date in chronic pain conditions,"
says Rice, now president and chief scientist at Integrated Tissue Dynamics LLC,
a biotechnology research company in Rensselaer, N.Y.In recent years, scans of
patients with fibromyalgia have revealed brain changes associated with pain, but
the new research suggests these are a symptom rather than the cause of the
condition.
This new understanding of fibromyalgia will hopefully lead
to better treatments, Rice and Oaklander say.
Right now, most people are treated with the antidepressants
Cymbalta made by Eli Lilly, or Savella by Forest Pharmaceuticals, or with
Lyrica, a seizure medication from Pfizer - which have all been federally
approved for use in fibromyalgia.But these drugs have side effects and don't
help everyone."We're looking now to understand more about other features
of the pathology that might lead to a more targeted approach and less of a
shotgun that causes side effects," says Rice, also an adjunct professor at
the University at Albany, State
University of New York.
The trigger for fibromyalgia is still a mystery, although
stressful events in patients' past have been thought to play a role.
Rheumatologist Richard Chou says there is some preliminary
evidence that the nerve damage is caused by the immune system.
"We're hoping some day we'll be able to say exactly how
your immune system is causing damage to the sensory nerves that results in
fibromyalgia pain," says Chou, an assistant professor at the Geisel School
of Medicine at Dartmouth in New Hampshire. Researchers don't yet know whether
the pain causes the other problems of fibromyalgia - disrupting sleep, for
instance - or whether both pain and sleep disturbances share the same cause.
Fibromyalgia's constellation of symptoms is very similar to
those of chronic fatigue syndrome and Gulf War syndrome, which Oaklander's
group also studies. "If someone has more of one symptom than another they
might call it one thing, like chronic fatigue, but it's not clear that these
are different," Oaklander says.
She says researchers still have a lot to learn about these
conditions, but scientists are taking them more seriously and making real
progress for the first time.
Carolyn DiSilva of Maynard, Mass.,
one of Oaklander's patients, says she was stunned to learn that she had
small-fiber neuropathy caused by an overactive immune system, instead of
fibromyalgia.
"I think a lot of people, they get a blanket diagnosis
as fibromyalgia because doctors don't know what's wrong with them," says
DiSilva, 47, who has suffered from unexplained pains for about 14 years. The
non-stop agony and the pins and needles that plagued her for hours at a time
forced her to give up her work as a hair stylist, she says.
Understanding what's causing her pain has helped her, she
says, because doctors and others take her problems seriously, instead of
dismissing her as they used to do.
And now that it's clear DiSilva has an immune problem,
Oaklander has put her on intravenous immunoglobulin treatments - instead of
conventional fibromyalgia therapy - which seem to be making a profound
difference in her health.
DiSilva says her pain has dropped from a 10 on a 10-point
scale to about a 4."I always hope that someday I'll wake up with no pain,
but I'm so grateful that I've come this far." "
By Karen Weintraub
Special for USA
TODAY
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