Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Play Play Play Play
Unregistered User
Click here if this is not your Personal Edition
 
Contact Us | Free E-Mail Updates | Journals | Register a colleague
 
 
Fibromyalgia
 
   
 
SEARCH   
Doctor's Guide Free CME
Medline
Congress Resource Centre
 

 EXPLORE :
   Most Read News
 All News  All News
 All Webcasts / CME  All Webcasts / CME
 All Cases  All Cases
 Congress Resource Centre  Congress Resource Centre
 All Medical Resources  All Medical Resources
 Medical  My Personal Edition



Warning | Privacy

 

 
 Recent news - Fibromyalgia
    Duloxetine Directly Improves Pain in Patients With Fibromyalgia and Depression: Presented at AAPM - (DGDispatch)
    Sodium Oxybate Improves Pain, Function in Patients With Fibromyalgia: Presented at AAPM - (DGDispatch)
    Milnacipran Alleviates Multiple Symptoms of Fibromyalgia: Presented at AAPM - (DGDispatch)
    TopAbstracts in Fibromyalgia 01/13/2010 - (DGNews)
    TopAbstracts in Fibromyalgia 12/16/2009 - (DGNews)

    News archive

     Recent webcasts/CME - Fibromyalgia
    • Improving Patient Outcomes in Fibromyalgia Syndrome: A Clinical Update on Appropriate Diagnosis, Adequate Treatment, and Proper Management of Comorbid Conditions
    • Understanding the Potential Etiologies of Fibromyalgia
    • Tools for Supporting Optimal Fibromyalgia Diagnosis and Treatment: An Update for Primary Care and Managed Care
      The Role of the OB/GYN in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Fibromyalgia
      Fibromyalgia: The Patient Who Hurts Too Much

      Webcasts/CME archive

       Recent cases

        Cases archive
          




        my personal edition > fibromyalgia > news
        divider

          E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague

        DGNews


        Study of Brain Activity of Fibromyalgia Patients Supports Treating Depression and Physical Pain Independently, Even When They Co-Exist

        HOBOKEN, N.J. -- April 28, 2005 -- Does clinical depression bring about chronic pain? Or does pain lead to depression? Because these two conditions frequently co-exist—30 to 54 percent of patients with major depressive disorder also suffer persistent physical pain—there has been much speculation about whether one causes the other or whether a common underlying factor provokes both. Results of studies into the precise nature of this relationship, however, have been inconsistent.

        To gain a clearer understanding of the depression-pain connection, researchers affiliated with the University of Michigan and the University of Cologne, Germany, focused on the underlying mechanisms in the perception of pain, physical and emotional: the brain.

        The findings, featured in the May 2005 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism, challenge existing notions on the interplay of emotion and sensation and have important implications for treating depression and pain as separate conditions, even when they occur simultaneously.

        The study focused on 53 patients, 33 women and 20 men, with fibromyalgia (FM). This syndrome is characterized by intense widespread pain and tenderness to touch and is often accompanied by depression. Using this patient population, the research team set out to evaluate whether higher levels of symptoms of depression are associated with increased sensitivity to pressure-induced pain, as well as to determine which regions of the brain are involved in processing acute pain, chronic pain, and depressive symptoms. 42 healthy controls, 20 women and 22 men, were also included in the study. The mean age was 42 for the FM patients and 38 for the controls.

        Conducted at Georgetown University's General Clinical Research Center, the study began by assessing the severity of chronic pain and depression in FM patients, through a combination of interviews, questionnaires, and measurement scales. The following day, all subjects, both FM patients and controls, participated in pressure-pain sensitivity experiments involving the application of pressure to a thumbnail.

        To get a clear picture of the brain's response to painful stimuli, all subjects underwent magnetic resonance imagining (MRI) scans, before, during, and after the pressure-sensitivity sessions. FM patients were required to discontinue antidepressant medications 4 weeks prior to the study, as well as refrain from using any drugs for pain, including over-the-counter analgesics, starting 3 days before the study.

        Based on the MRI results, the researchers found that FM patients required significantly less applied pressure than healthy controls to activate neurons associated with acute pain in the brain's sensory domain. This heightened sensitivity applied to FM patients in general, regardless of whether they had been diagnosed with major depressive disorder or reported any depressive symptoms. Furthermore, the researchers found only a weak correlation between the sensory regions of the brain associated with chronic pain and the affective or emotional regions of the brain associated with depression.

        "Much has been made of the overlap and similarities between pain and symptoms of depression, but these and other data suggest it is also important to identify pain-processing mechanisms that are independent of mood," notes the study's leading author, Thorsten Giesecke, MD.

        "The notion that sensory and affective aspects of pain may be independently processed is not just of theoretical interest," he adds. "Evaluation of these sensory and affective dimensions in patients with chronic pain is likely to improve diagnosis, choice of treatment, and treatment efficacy."

        As this study affirms, prescribing a standard antidepressant medication will not necessarily relieve the suffering of a depressed patient whose pain is not only real but also intensely physical.


        Article:
        Thorsten Giesecke, et al. The Relationship Between Depression, Clinical Pain, and Experimental Pain in a Chronic Pain Cohort. Arthritis & Rheumatism, May 2005; 52:5;1577-1584.


        SOURCE: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.



        E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague   To print, use this version






        All contents Copyright (c) 1995-2010 Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.



        The NTK initiative. Physicians helping physicians identify Need-To-Know science
           Feedback
        Please rate this article: Strongly DISAGREE...Strongly AGREE NTK logo
        Question 1 - Physicians need to become aware of this information as soon as possible. Question 2 - This information is likely to have an impact on the way physicians practice medicine.
        1
        2
        3
        4
        5
        6
        7
        Send