Fibromyalgia Flashcards
risk factors for fibromyalgia
low household income lack of further education female FH having been through a traumatic event e.g. car crash having certain conditions e.g. RA
differentials for wide spread muscle pain and fatigue
fibromyalgia
endocrine - addisons, hyperparathyroid, hyopothyroid myopathy, vitamin D deficiency
infection - Hep C, HIV
rheumatology - SLE, RA, polymyalgia rheumatic
malignancy - lymphoma
features and diagnosis criteria for fibromyalgia
chronic widespread pain
must be >3 months in duration
found on both sides of the body - left and right also above and below the waist and along the axial sign
difficulty sleeping and poor concentration/memory also typical features
no other disorders to explain the pain
wide spread pain index score of 7 and symptom severity scale score of 5 or WPI of 3-6 and SS scale of 9
examination in suspected fibromyalgia
18 tender points that must be palpated, pain in 11+ is in keeping with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia
e.g. supraspinatus, gluteal, trapezius
investigations in wide spread muscle pain and fatigue
patients with fibromyalgia don’t have consistent abnormalities on lab testing
done to exclude other causes
TFTs - hypothyroid
vitamin D - low levels can cause muscle pain and fatigue
B12 - same as above
Iron studies
magnesium - low levels can lead to muscle spasms
ESR/CPR - IA
other tests if suspected by history - features of IA or CTD include ANA, RF, anti CCP
management of fibromyalgia
patient education
move down numbers if insufficient effect of previous step, use level 3 where necessary
1) EXERCISE
2) acupuncture, hydrotherapy, sedative movement, mindfulness
3) CBT
3) screen and treat for anxiety and depression where appropriate
3) amitriptyline OD in the evening to help sleep and pain if needed. Other meds: duloxetine, pregablin, tramadol
3) multimodal rehab programme for those with severe disability and sick leave
how to predict poor prognosis in a patient with chronic disease
yellow flags - suggest increased risk of progression to long term distress, disability and pain
Biomedical yellow flags: severe pain or increased disability at presentation, previous significant pain episodes, multiple site pain, non-organic signs, iatrogenic factors
Psychological yellow flags: belief that pain indicates harm, activity is harmful, an exception that passive rather than active treatments are most helpful, fear avoidance behaviour, catastrophic thinking, poor problem solving ability, passive coping strategies, atypical health beliefs, psychosomatic perceptions, high levels of distress
Social yellow flags: low expectation of return to work, lack of confidence in performing work activities, heavier work, low levels of control over rate of work, poor work relationships, social dysfunction, medico-legal issues