News

Tender-Point Criteria For Fibromyalgia Flawed


 

DESTIN, FLA. — The tender-point criteria commonly used to diagnose fibromyalgia are not useful and in fact may even explain why the disease appears to disproportionately affect women, Daniel Clauw, M.D., said at a rheumatology meeting sponsored by Virginia Commonwealth University.

According to the American College of Rheumatology's 1990 classification criteria, patients must have both widespread pain and tenderness in 11 of 18 tender points to be diagnosed with fibromyalgia.

Yet “tender points merely represent areas of the body where everyone is more tender,” explained Dr. Clauw, the executive director of the Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Fibromyalgia patients and healthy individuals were found to have different thresholds of pain in those tender points. The two groups also had different thresholds of pain in areas not thought to be tender. In addition, the cutoff of 11 out of 18 tender points is arbitrary, he said.

In the past, the disorder was considered a discrete illness with pain and focal areas of tenderness. In more recent years, fibromyalgia has been appreciated as part of a larger continuum, with many somatic symptoms and diffuse tenderness all over the body.

Study findings suggest that the number of tender points correlates better with a patient's general stress than with pain, he said.

Women are 10 times more likely to have achy and tender points, so the higher incidence of fibromyalgia among them may be due to a selection bias created by the criteria, Dr. Clauw noted.

Recommended Reading

Frozen Shoulder
MDedge Family Medicine
Glucosamine Delays Knee Replacement Surgery
MDedge Family Medicine
Early Surgery, Low BMI for Microfractures
MDedge Family Medicine
Meniscal Tear May Be First Indicator of Knee OA
MDedge Family Medicine
Acupuncture May Beat Sham for Knee Osteoarthritis Pain
MDedge Family Medicine
Gout Prevalence Rises to Physicians' Chagrin : Several reports seem to suggest that the epidemic is due in part to longstanding undertreatment.
MDedge Family Medicine
Weight Gain, Body Fat Are Linked With Gout Risk in Men
MDedge Family Medicine
Desensitization Offers Hope to Gout Patients Allergic to Allopurinol
MDedge Family Medicine
Vitamin D Deficiency Common in Osteoporosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Suboptimal Vitamin D Levels Seen In Women Treated for Osteoporosis
MDedge Family Medicine