July 2020
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22 Reads
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2 Citations
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July 2020
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22 Reads
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2 Citations
January 2010
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253 Reads
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54 Citations
Journal of Musculoskeletal Pain
Background: There has been a growing recognition of the need for information about objective abnormalities in people with the fibromyalgia syndrome [FMS] and for an integrated approach to its diagnosis and management by primary care physicians. Objectives: To establish an expert consensus toward a working case definition of FMS and a working guide to its management for physicians in Canada. Methods: An Expert Subcommittee of Health Canada established the Terms of Reference and selected an Expert Medical Consensus Panel representing treating physicians, teaching faculty, and researchers. The editors prepared a draft document which was reviewed by the Panel members in preparation for the Consensus Workshop, which was held on March 30 to April 1, 2001. Subsequent writing assignments produced subdocuments on key topics relevant to the objectives. The subdocuments were then integrated into a submission document which was approved by each of the panel members. Results: The completed document is provided. It contains sections on a new approach to case definition, on proposed research to validate the new case definition, on a practical approach to assessment of severity, on empathetic management; and on what is known about pathogenesis. Conclusions: A consensus document was developed to assist clinicians in distinguishing FMS from other syndromes/illnesses that may present with body pain. It is intended that this document serve as a guide: to a better understanding of FMS; to a more reasoned approach to its management; and to further research on the clinical care of people with FMS.
... It is characterized by debilitating fatigue and post-exertion malaise (the symptoms are made worse by exertion) accompanied by muscular and joint pain; sleep disturbances; neurocognitive impairment; gastro-intestinal problems; and neuro-sensory, perception, and motor disturbances (Carruthers & van de Sande, 2005;Carruthers et al., 2011). Fibromyalgia has a similar symptom profile and causes widespread body pain and tenderness in muscles and joints, often accompanied by debilitating fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, increased sensitivity to sensory stimuli, disturbed sleep, stiffness, gut problems, and autonomic and/or neuro-endocrine manifestations (Jain et al., 2003;Wolfe et al., 2010). These two conditions often co-exist, and the precise medical etiology, or cause of both conditions has not been identified. ...
Reference:
Resisting Ableism in Research Design
July 2020
... Although the pain observed in FMS is generally described by being burning, gnawing, throbbing, and sharp, sometimes patients cannot describe the character of the pain. The pain and the perception of pain observed in FMS have several features [20]. The severity of the pain may indicate variability and fluctuations. ...
January 2010
Journal of Musculoskeletal Pain