Publikationsansicht

Fibromyalgia and Gaucher's disease (2006)

Abstract
Background: Patients with symptomatic Gaucher's disease sometimes have non-specific symptoms (such as general malaise with widespread musculoskeletal pains) that respond poorly to enzyme replacement treatment. These may indicate fibromyalgia syndrome; if so, other therapeutic options might be more appropriate. Aim: To identify patients with Gaucher's disease for whom fibromyalgia-specific therapy may be therapeutic. Design: Questionnaire-based survey. Methods: Adult patients (n = 109) with non-neuronopathic Gaucher's disease and adult healthy controls (n = 108) completed health-related questionnaires including the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire, and underwent testing with a dolorimeter to ascertain sensitivity at 22 tender points. Results: Six patients, but no controls, met the criteria for fibromyalgia. Patients with fibromyalgia had a significantly greater incidence of co-morbidities (p = 0.014) relative to other patients with Gaucher's disease; four suffered from bone involvement and were receiving enzyme therapy, but two were untreated. Discussion: The presence of fibromyalgia-specific trigger points may result from multiple aetiologies, or may be an independently-sorting predisposition. Our findings cannot distinguish between these possibilities, but if fibromyalgia were the cause, enzyme replacement therapy would be expensive and inappropriate.

Details der Publikation
Download http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/99/2/103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hci147
Herausgeber Oxford University Press
Archiv HighWire Press OAI Repository (United States)
Keywords Original papers
Typ TEXT
Sprache Englisch