Fibromyalgia patients show brain abnormalities

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - French researchers have shown that patients with fibromyalgia have abnormal blood flow in the brain, which may be related to the underlying cause of the condition.

“We found brain functional differences between patients with fibromyalgia and those who do not have the disorder,” lead investigator Dr. Eric Guedj told Reuters Health. “These brain functional abnormalities were correlated with the severity of the disease, but not with anxiety or depression, in regions of the brain known to be involved in pain processing.”

To visualize these abnormalities, the researchers used single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), a special type of CT scanning test in which a small amount of a radioactive compound is injected into a vein. This allows SPECT to make a detailed image of areas in which the radioactive material is taken up by the cells, providing information about blood flow to tissues and metabolism in the body.

Guedj of Center Hospitalo-Universitaire de la Timone, Marseilles, and colleagues studied 20 patients with fibromyalgia and 10 healthy individuals. The findings are reported in the Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

Overall, the findings “suggest that fibromyalgia may be defined as a brain functional disorder involving these regions,” Guedj concluded.

The underlying cause of fibromyalgia is not known. Previously the classification of fibromyalgia has been questioned by some and thought by others to be associated with depression. Other possible causes are sleep disorders, infection, abnormalities of the nervous system and changes in muscle metabolism.

SOURCE: Journal of Nuclear Medicine, November 2008.

Source

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:


By Megan Rauscher NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Depression and the chronic pain syndrome fibromyalgia are common in patients who suffer from chronic Lyme disease and seem to correlate with poor functional outcomes, results of a study indicate. The term chronic Lyme disease describes patients with persistent Lyme disease despite prior treatment with a conventional 2- to

Full Post: Depression, pain may accompany chronic Lyme disease
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Megan Rauscher NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Results of a brain imaging study suggest that the brain may be affected very early in the course of lupus, even before the disease is diagnosed. Lupus, technically known as systemic lupus erythematosus or SLE, is a chronic “autoimmune” disease in which the immune system can confuse healthy and

Full Post: Lupus affects the brain very early in the disease
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Depression, anxiety and certain other mental health conditions are more common among infertile couples than those who are able to conceive on their own, a small study suggests. The findings, say researchers, imply that routine mental health screening could benefit patients being treated for infertility. While most of the 81 infertile couples

Full Post: Mental woes more common in infertile couples
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO (Reuters) - A study of identical twins — one with combat experience and one without — suggests both genetic and environmental factors contribute to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), U.S. researchers said Tuesday. The 10-year study aimed to determine whether the often-debilitating anxiety disorder arises from an inherent vulnerability or is strictly caused by

Full Post: Some people may be predisposed to PTSD
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Martina Fuchs LONDON (Reuters) - A breakdown in a reaction between immune cells and blood vessels in the brain appears to play a key role in epilepsy, Italian researchers said Monday. The discovery could mean that some modern antibody-based drugs designed to modify the immune system used in other diseases may one day help fight the

Full Post: Scientists shed light on causes of epilepsy

Site Navigation

Most Read

Search

Contact

  • kinwrite.com@gmail.com