Blue Butterflies
« Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia »

Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
Dec 6, 2009, 2:00am




Blue Butterflies :: ME/CFS and FMS :: Research & News :: Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia
   [Search This Thread][Send Topic To Friend] [Print]
 AuthorAnnouncement: Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia (Read 17 times)
Ms B.
Forum Caretaker
*****
Ah! I'm A Waffle Iron!
member is offline

[avatar]

Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum

[msn]
[homepage]

Joined: Feb 2007
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,889
Location: Sydney N.S.W
Karma: 29
 Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia
« Thread Started on Oct 31, 2009, 1:03pm »

(I'll be posting this on in our blog tomorrow!)


Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia Still A Contentious Point.
by Sam McManis, Sacramento Bee

Asked to describe the seemingly indescribable, to make real the manifestations of a medical condition that some still doubt even exists, fibromyalgia patients often rely on similes of the most wince-inducing sort.

"I felt like acid was going through my veins."

"It was like a steamroller ran over me."

"Fatigue like someone's pulled out your battery pack."

" . . . as if someone pinged me with a hammer all over my body."

Can there be any doubt that these people truly are suffering from diffuse, widespread chronic pain with multiple tender spots, enervating fatigue and a host of symptoms that include restless legs, impaired memory and depression?

Well, yes.

Despite being recognized as a diagnosable disease by the American College of Rheumatology, the Food and Drug Administration and most insurers, fibromyalgia has not shed the stigma of being dismissed as "psychosomatic" by some in the medical establishment.

Controversy swirls even as new FDA-approved medications have shown promise and recent brain-imaging research has shown central-nervous-system changes in those afflicted. The National Fibromyalgia Association, a patient advocacy group, estimates that 10 million Americans suffer from one or more of the multifarious manifestations of the condition. It is this array of symptoms not linked to specific cause and effect -- as opposed to how rheumatoid arthritis can ravage a patient's joints -- that keeps skeptics in mainstream medicine from validating fibromyalgia as a legitimate disease.

Where, exactly, is this deep muscular aching? What is the cause of that nebulous numbness and dizziness? Why won't painkillers help? Where are the lab tests that can prove it exists?

Those are the questions that still dog fibromyalgia patients.

"They make you think you're a hypochondriac or something," says Jennifer Filbeck, 36, a former restaurant manager from Fairfield, Calif., who has been unable to work since 2006. "Doctors treat you like you're crazy."

Not crazy, per se, critics of the existence of fibromyalgia claim. Their argument: These people suffer from psychological conditions that manifest themselves in vague and hard-to-define physical maladies.

Dr. Frederick Wolfe, who wrote the landmark 1990 paper that first created diagnostic guidelines for fibromyalgia, recently told The New York Times that he now considers it merely a byproduct of depression, stress and social anxiety.

Wolfe, head of the National Databank of Rheumatic Diseases, told the paper: "Some of us in those days thought that we had actually identified a disease, which clearly this is not. To make people ill, to give them an illness, was the wrong thing."

That view is supported by Dr. Nortin Hadler, a rheumatologist and professor at the University of North Carolina. Writing in the Journal of Rheumatology, Hadler states bluntly that fibromyalgia is all in the mind.

"I am suggesting that chronic persistent pain is an ideation, a somatization if you will, that some are inclined toward as a response to living life under a pall, and not vice versa," he writes. "I am further suggesting that these people choose to be patients because they have exhausted their wherewithal to cope." Medical literature has been slow to publish data on fibromyalgia. Recent studies have gone a long way in disputing the claims of Wolfe and Hadler, though researchers still have yet to pinpoint a cause.

Dr. David Ferrera, medical director of the Sacramento Research Medical Group in California, has spent three years conducting clinical trials on a new treatment drug, Savella, which received FDA approval in January.

Ferrera acknowledges that "it is a complex disorder and there's still a lot to learn," but he says fibromyalgia patients are underserved by many doctors.

"I've had women in tears in my office because they say, 'You're the first doctor who's believed me.' These people often take three or four years to get diagnosed. They are told, 'Your lab tests are normal, there's nothing wrong with you. You're just depressed. Go get a life.' They feel like second-class citizens and begin to feel it's imaginary.

"The problem is, measuring differences in fibro people isn't easily done in a doctor's office. So they are dismissed," Ferrera said.

Another reason fibromyalgia patients often aren't taken seriously, particularly by primary-care physicians, is that seven of 10 sufferers are women, says Lynne Matallana, president of the National Fibromyalgia Association. Matallana need look no further than her own story for an example. A former advertising executive, Matallana started feeling full-body pain, fatigue, dizziness and anxiety shortly after an unrelated surgery in 1993.

Doctors were as skeptical as they were baffled, she says.

"I knew I wasn't crazy," she says. "But you start to think, maybe I am imagining this."

Her diagnosis came three years and 37 doctors after she first felt pain. An easing of her symptoms didn't come until seven years later, after experimenting with everything from acupuncture to yoga to antidepressants.

Matallana says that even today, "when there's science behind it," fibromyalgia carries a psychosomatic stigma.

Roseville, Calif., fibromyalgia patient Ann Davis, 62, was so desperate in 2007 that she signed up to participate in a clinical trial for Savella, which differs from the other fibromyalgia drugs in that it blocks both serotonin (which Lyrica and Cymbalta do) and another neurotransmitter, norepinephrine (which the others do not).

She says she felt relief within a month and is back playing golf and gardening. When she was taken off the drug, symptoms resumed with a vengeance.

"I don't get the fatigue," Davis says. "That's the big thing. I mean, I'll get muscle soreness like any normal person if I overdo it. But I don't wake up thinking a steamroller has run over me."
Link to Post - Back to Top  IP: Logged

To Quote The Care Bears ~ "Sharing Is Caring"
Nullum magnum ingenium sine mixtura dementiae fuit
susana
Extrovert
**
member is offline

[avatar]

...and she's buying the stairway to Heaven.



Joined: Nov 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 342
Location: USA
Karma: 11
 Re: Legitimacy of Fibromyalgia
« Reply #1 on Nov 8, 2009, 4:16am »

If there is a Hell, there most certainly is a special place in it for those who would delegitimize these illnesses or even worse make them out to be a matter of choice. Even if by some stretch of the imagination it were true that it was psychosomatic, or "somotized", that is mental illness.... So, whether physical or mental, illness is illness and causes suffering, loss of function, and impacts quality of life.
Link to Post - Back to Top  IP: Logged

"I thought I'd heard everything until I found out there are people who dance with their cats."
   [Search This Thread][Send Topic To Friend] [Print]

Who We Are

Blue Butterflies is a open minded, friendly, supportive community for sufferers of ME/CFS & FMS. BB's was created with the intent of being a place for alternative healing, spiritualist and open minded discussion, creativity, and a place for a more open minded community, but we also welcome non spiritual or non new-age individuals.

Staff
Ms B.
ArgyrosfeniX
Fae Kitty

Navigation


Words of Wisdom

Our Blog Articles


Chat Box
Please use your forum username & refrain from the following;
  • Swearing
  • Spamming
  • Long posts

ShoutMix chat widget
Our Book Shelf
Shelfari: Book reviews on your book blog
Our Affiliates

CFIDS & FMS FOGGY BLOGGERS
Powered By Ringsurf

Google
Webcfsandfmshelp.proboards.com
Click Here To Make This Board Ad-Free


This Board Hosted For FREE By ProBoards
Get Your Own Free Message Boards & Free Forums!