The study this article is based on appears to be a year old, but hasn't been posted on here (at least not that I could find).
I thought it was interesting that they found abnormalities via SPECT, as I know Dr. Hyde has been using SPECT to diagnose ME patients for years, but I have never heard of it being studied in fibro (though I don't know much about fibro research).
Does anyone know if any of these are the same findings as in ME?
http://personalhealthmedication.com/fibromyalgia-can-no-longer-be-called-the-invisible-syndrome/
Excerpt:
I thought it was interesting that they found abnormalities via SPECT, as I know Dr. Hyde has been using SPECT to diagnose ME patients for years, but I have never heard of it being studied in fibro (though I don't know much about fibro research).
Does anyone know if any of these are the same findings as in ME?
http://personalhealthmedication.com/fibromyalgia-can-no-longer-be-called-the-invisible-syndrome/
Excerpt:
Fibromyalgia Can No Longer Be Called The “Invisible” Syndrome
Using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), researchers in France were able to detect functional abnormalities in certain regions in the brains of patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia, reinforcing the idea that symptoms of the disorder are related to a dysfunction in those parts of the brain where pain is processed.
“Fibromyalgia is frequently considered an ‘invisible syndrome’ since musculoskeletal imaging is negative,” said Eric Guedj, M.D., and lead author of the study. “Past imaging studies of patients with the syndrome, however, have shown above-normal cerebral blood flow (brain perfusion) in some areas of the brain and below-normal in other areas. After performing whole-brain scans on the participants, we used a statistical analysis to study the relationship between functional activity in even the smallest area of the brain and various parameters related to pain, disability and anxiety/depression.”
In the study, which was reported in the November issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 20 women diagnosed with fibromyalgia and 10 healthy women as a control group responded to questionnaires to determine levels of pain, disability, anxiety and depression. SPECT was then performed, and positive and negative correlations were determined.
The researchers confirmed that patients with the syndrome exhibited brain perfusion abnormalities in comparison to the healthy subjects. Further, these abnormalities were found to be directly correlated with the severity of the disease. An increase in perfusion (hyperperfusion) was found in that region of the brain known to discriminate pain intensity, and a decrease (hypoperfusion) was found within those areas thought to be involved in emotional responses to pain.
In the past, some researchers have thought that the pain reported by fibromyalgia patients was the result of depression rather than symptoms of a disorder. “Interestingly, we found that these functional abnormalities were independent of anxiety and depression status,” Guedj said...