Fibromyalgia is a condition that causes aches and pain all over the body. People with fibromyalgia often experience extreme tiredness or sleeping, mood, or memory problems. Between 80 and 90 percent of people with fibromyalgia are women. Learn more about fibromyalgia symptoms and treatments in women.
Chronic Pain in Women
Image by StoryMD
What Is Fibromyalgia?
Fibromyalgia
Image by Arocamora/Wikimedia
Fibromyalgia
Image by Arocamora/Wikimedia
What Is Fibromyalgia?
Fibromyalgia is also called fibromyalgia syndrome. A syndrome is a group of symptoms that happen together. People with fibromyalgia experience aches and pain all over the body, fatigue (extreme tiredness that does not get better with sleep or rest), and problems sleeping.
Fibromyalgia may be caused by a problem in the brain with nerves and pain signals. In other words, in people with fibromyalgia, the brain misunderstands everyday pain and other sensory experiences, making the person more sensitive to pressure, temperature (hot or cold), bright lights, and noise compared to people who do not have fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia has been compared to arthritis. Like arthritis, fibromyalgia causes pain and fatigue. But, unlike arthritis, fibromyalgia does not cause redness and swelling, or damage to your joints.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (8)
What is Fibromyalgia? (Muscle Pain and Tenderness)
Video by healthery/YouTube
Fibromyalgia Animation
Video by Blausen Medical Corporate/YouTube
Real Pain and 'Explosive' Brains | Fibromyalgia
Video by SciShow Psych/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: Suzanne's story | NHS
Video by NHS/YouTube
What is Fibromyalgia?
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia
Video by XpertDox/YouTube
What is Fibromyalgia?
Video by Cleveland Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia Overview
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
2:45
What is Fibromyalgia? (Muscle Pain and Tenderness)
healthery/YouTube
0:33
Fibromyalgia Animation
Blausen Medical Corporate/YouTube
6:06
Real Pain and 'Explosive' Brains | Fibromyalgia
SciShow Psych/YouTube
3:06
Fibromyalgia: Suzanne's story | NHS
NHS/YouTube
4:00
What is Fibromyalgia?
Mayo Clinic/YouTube
1:59
Fibromyalgia
XpertDox/YouTube
1:44
What is Fibromyalgia?
Cleveland Clinic/YouTube
7:38
Fibromyalgia Overview
Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Who Gets Fibromyalgia?
Women bear the majority of chronic pain but are underserved
Image by StoryMD
Women bear the majority of chronic pain but are underserved
Most people who live with chronic pain are women, but they are more likely to receive worse care than their male counterparts. There are more dismissals, greater numbers of misdiagnoses, and a higher chance of being untreated if you’re a woman undergoing this life-changing journey.
Image by StoryMD
Who Gets Fibromyalgia?
Fibromyalgia affects as many as 4 million Americans 18 and older. The average age range at which fibromyalgia is diagnosed is 35 to 45 years old, but most people have had symptoms, including chronic pain, that started much earlier in life.
Fibromyalgia is more common in women than in men.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (3)
Fibromyalgia Symptoms: What You Need to Know!
Video by Medical Centric/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: an illness without a definitive test or cure
Video by Global News/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: Living with chronic pain - BBC Stories
Video by BBC Stories/YouTube
4:32
Fibromyalgia Symptoms: What You Need to Know!
Medical Centric/YouTube
1:39
Fibromyalgia: an illness without a definitive test or cure
Global News/YouTube
7:59
Fibromyalgia: Living with chronic pain - BBC Stories
BBC Stories/YouTube
Are Some Women More at Risk?
Fibromyalgia pain sites
Image by SigTif/Wikimedia
Fibromyalgia pain sites
In 2019, the American Pain Society in collaboration with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration developed a new diagnostic system for fibromyalgia. The core diagnostic criteria are: (1) Multisite pain defined as six or more pain sites from a total of nine possible sites (head, arms, chest, abdomen, upper back, lower back, and legs), for at least three months, (2) Moderate to severe sleep problems or fatigue, for at least three months.
Image by SigTif/Wikimedia
Are Some Women More at Risk for Fibromyalgia?
Maybe. Fibromyalgia is more common in people who:
Have obesity
Smoke
Have another rheumatic (related to the joints) condition, such as rheumatoid arthritis or lupus
Have a close relative with fibromyalgia. Researchers think a gene or genes may cause pain when pain would not normally happen.
Have or had trauma to the brain or spinal cord. Physical trauma may come from an injury or repeated injuries, illness, or an accident. Emotional stress or trauma, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, may also lead to fibromyalgia.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Fibromyalgia is a condition in which individuals--most frequently women--suffer from unexplained muscular pain and fatigue. They may have trouble sleeping, often awaken feeling stiff, and may experience thought and memory problems or numbness or tingling in the hands or feet. The biology of fibromyalgia overlaps to some extent with that of depression, and a high percentage of fibromyalgia patients also have some form of depression. The two conditions may well increase each other's severity.
Chronic (long-term), widespread pain is the most common symptom of fibromyalgia. You may feel the pain all over your body. Or, you may feel it more in the muscles you use most often, like in your back or legs. The pain may feel like a deep muscle ache, or it may throb or burn. Your pain may also be worse in the morning.
Other symptoms of fibromyalgia include:
Extreme tiredness, called fatigue, that does not get better with sleep or rest
Cognitive and memory problems (sometimes called “fibro fog”)
Trouble sleeping
Mood problems
Morning fatigue
Muscle fatigue, causing them to twitch or cramp
Headaches
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
Painful menstrual periods
Numbness or tingling of hands and feet
Restless legs syndrome
Temperature sensitivity
Sensitivity to loud noises or bright lights
Depression or anxiety
Women with fibromyalgia often have more morning fatigue, pain all over the body, and IBS symptoms than men with fibromyalgia have.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
What are the symptoms of fibromyalgia? London Pain Clinic
The London Pain Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia
Hang Pham/Wikimedia
What Causes Fibromyalgia?
Chronic Pain (Fact Sheet)
Image by Borsook D, Moulton EA, Schmidt KF, Becerra LR.
Chronic Pain (Fact Sheet)
Image Cption : Schematic Examples of CNS Structural Changes. Red circles signify decreased gray matter density relative to controls. A. Subjects with chronic back pain show decreases in gray matter density in bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and right anterior thalamus (adapted from [25]). B. Patients with fibromyalgia show decreases in cingulate cortex (CC), medial prefrontal cortex (Med. PFC), parahippocampal gyrus (PHG) and insula (adapted from [27]). 3-D surface renderings were created using Freesurfer. Borsook et al. Molecular Pain 2007 3:25 doi:10.1186/1744-8069-3-25
Image by Borsook D, Moulton EA, Schmidt KF, Becerra LR.
What Causes Fibromyalgia?
Researchers are not sure exactly what causes fibromyalgia. Genetics may play a role.
Studies also show that the brains of people with fibromyalgia may not process pain in the same way as people who do not have fibromyalgia. Lower levels of certain brain neurotransmitters, such as serotonin or norepinephrine, may cause you to be more sensitive to pain and have a more severe reaction to pain. Imaging studies of the brain show that people with fibromyalgia feel pain when people without fibromyalgia do not. Some medicines prescribed to treat fibromyalgia try to bring the levels of those neurotransmitters back into balance.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (3)
FIBROMYALGIA, Causes, Signs and Symptoms, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Video by Medical Centric/YouTube
Fibromyalgia & Pain Management : What Causes Fibromyalgia?
Video by ehowhealth/YouTube
Neurotransmitters
Synapse between Neurons : Chemical synapses are specialized junctions through which the cells of the nervous system signal to each other. Electrical impulses generated by a presynaptic neuron are transmitted by way of neurotransmitters (messenger chemicals) across the synaptic cleft and to the postsynaptic neuron, which then propagates the electrical signal onward to its eventual destination.
Image by TheVisualMD
4:48
FIBROMYALGIA, Causes, Signs and Symptoms, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Medical Centric/YouTube
1:31
Fibromyalgia & Pain Management : What Causes Fibromyalgia?
ehowhealth/YouTube
Neurotransmitters
TheVisualMD
What Causes Symptoms to Flare?
Fibromyalgia
Image by TheVisualMD
Fibromyalgia
You wouldn’t necessarily know that someone has fibromyalgia unless they told you. Many — though certainly not all — sufferers appear totally fine on the surface, as there’s no obvious marker of an ailment like you would have with psoriasis, for example.
Image by TheVisualMD
What Causes Fibromyalgia Symptoms to Flare?
Fibromyalgia symptoms can happen without warning. But certain events may trigger flare-ups, including:
Hormonal changes during the menstrual cycle or pregnancy. You may have more trouble sleeping, more widespread pain, or headaches just before your period when your hormone levels drop. Your periods may also be more painful.
Stress. Chronic (long-term) stress may raise your risk for getting fibromyalgia. Also, short-term stress, such as work stress, or stressful events, such as a death of a loved one, can trigger flare-ups in people who have fibromyalgia.
Changes in weather. Some women report pain with changes in barometric pressure (such as when the temperature drops from warm to cold) or on hot, humid days.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (2)
Rain and Pain in Fibromyalgia
Video by dailyRx/YouTube
Do sex hormones influence fibromyalgia?
Video by Neuroinflammation, Pain, and Fatigue Lab at UAB/YouTube
0:36
Rain and Pain in Fibromyalgia
dailyRx/YouTube
11:04
Do sex hormones influence fibromyalgia?
Neuroinflammation, Pain, and Fatigue Lab at UAB/YouTube
How Is It Diagnosed?
How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
Image by Sav vas
How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
Tender points fibromyalgia
Image by Sav vas
How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
Your doctor or nurse will ask about your symptoms and your medical history. There is no lab test for fibromyalgia. Instead, your doctor will make a diagnosis based upon two criteria:
You have experienced widespread (in many places on the body) pain for longer than three months.
You have other symptoms, such as fatigue, or memory or sleep problems.
You may have to see several doctors before getting a diagnosis. One reason for this may be that pain and fatigue, the main symptoms of fibromyalgia, also are symptoms of many other conditions, such as myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, and lupus. Doctors try to figure out if fibromyalgia or another health problem is causing your symptoms.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (10)
Tender points fibromyalgia
The location of the nine paired tender points that constitute the 1990 American College of Rheumatology criteria for fibromyalgia
Image by Sav vas, Jmarchn
BOLD activation weighted by suggestion to reduce or increase fibromyalgia pain report during hypnosis (left), without hypnosis (middle) and the difference between these conditions (right)
BOLD activation weighted by suggestion to reduce or increase
fibromyalgia pain report during hypnosis (left), without hypnosis (middle) and the difference between these conditions (right).
Image by (Derbyshire et al. 2009)./Wikimedia
First blood test for fibromyalgia could provide answers, validation | Ohio State Medical Center
Video by Ohio State Wexner Medical Center/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: Diagnostic Challenges
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: a breakthrough diagnosis
Video by University of Colorado Boulder/YouTube
Fibromyalgia - a patient education video by Dr. Carlo Oller
Video by PatientEducation.Video/YouTube
How is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed? A Doctor Explains
Video by Dr. Jen Caudle/YouTube
Fibromyalgia & Pain Management : How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
Video by ehowhealth/YouTube
A new understanding of fibromyalgia
Video by University of Colorado Boulder/YouTube
New Test For Fibromyalgia
Video by CBS New York/YouTube
Tender points fibromyalgia
Sav vas, Jmarchn
BOLD activation weighted by suggestion to reduce or increase fibromyalgia pain report during hypnosis (left), without hypnosis (middle) and the difference between these conditions (right)
(Derbyshire et al. 2009)./Wikimedia
1:56
First blood test for fibromyalgia could provide answers, validation | Ohio State Medical Center
Ohio State Wexner Medical Center/YouTube
3:28
Fibromyalgia: Diagnostic Challenges
Mayo Clinic/YouTube
1:01
Fibromyalgia: a breakthrough diagnosis
University of Colorado Boulder/YouTube
27:04
Fibromyalgia - a patient education video by Dr. Carlo Oller
PatientEducation.Video/YouTube
4:19
How is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed? A Doctor Explains
Dr. Jen Caudle/YouTube
0:56
Fibromyalgia & Pain Management : How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
ehowhealth/YouTube
1:02
A new understanding of fibromyalgia
University of Colorado Boulder/YouTube
1:46
New Test For Fibromyalgia
CBS New York/YouTube
How Is It Treated?
Talk Therapy
Image by TheVisualMD
Talk Therapy
Image by TheVisualMD
How Is Fibromyalgia Treated?
Treatment for fibromyalgia may include:
Medicine to treat your pain. The Food and Drug Administration has approved three medicines to treat fibromyalgia: pregabalin, duloxetine, and milnacipran. Your doctor may also suggest pain relievers or antidepressants to treat certain symptoms or to prevent flare-ups.
Talk therapy. Counseling sessions with a trained counselor can teach you different skills and techniques you can use to better control your pain. This type of therapy can be either one on one or in groups with a therapist. Living with a chronic condition like fibromyalgia can be difficult. Support groups may also give you emotional support and help you cope.
Your doctor or nurse may also suggest taking steps at home to relieve your symptoms.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (8)
How To Treat Fibromyalgia
Video by WCCO - CBS Minnesota/YouTube
How to Treat Fibromyalgia
Video by The London Pain Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia Treatment Research
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Treating fibromyalgia
Video by KPRC 2 Click2Houston/YouTube
How you can treat and manage Fibromyalgia
Video by The London Pain Clinic/YouTube
Fibromyalgia - Healing Massage Treatments
Video by NAT Global Campus/YouTube
Pregabalin
A prescription drug, widely known as lyrica, pregabalin is commonly classified as a sedative, an anxiolytic and a relaxant. It seemed a fairly innocuous drug; so innocuous that I dosed recklessly and got burned with it. I suffered a motion-like sickness, nausea and a very unpleasant inebriation lasting some hours. Subsequently I learned that the rate of fatality associated with its use is currently on a steep upward trajectory. If you are going to use this I would therefore urge the utmost caution.
Image by Dominic Milton Trott/Flickr
duloxetine 60 MG Delayed Release Oral Capsule
Image by National Library of Medicine
3:53
How To Treat Fibromyalgia
WCCO - CBS Minnesota/YouTube
2:51
How to Treat Fibromyalgia
The London Pain Clinic/YouTube
11:08
Fibromyalgia Treatment Research
Mayo Clinic/YouTube
2:19
Treating fibromyalgia
KPRC 2 Click2Houston/YouTube
12:56
How you can treat and manage Fibromyalgia
The London Pain Clinic/YouTube
11:22
Fibromyalgia - Healing Massage Treatments
NAT Global Campus/YouTube
Pregabalin
Dominic Milton Trott/Flickr
duloxetine 60 MG Delayed Release Oral Capsule
National Library of Medicine
What Steps Can I Take to Relieve Symptoms?
Manage Your Stress
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Manage Your Stress
The consequences of allowing stress to rule our life are not only emotional. Physical structures throughout the human body take a beating. Tiny spines on the dendrites of brain nerve cells are worn away by the effects of stress hormones. Stress also affects the immune response and is associated with increased fat around the organs, which is a serious health risk. A zone at the tail-end of each chromosome, called a telomere, unravels as we age. In recent years, scientists have found that when we are under stress, telomeres come apart more quickly.
Image by TheVisualMD
What Steps Can I Take at Home to Relieve Fibromyalgia Symptoms?
You can take the following steps at home to help relieve your symptoms:
Getting enough sleep. Most adults should try to get seven to eight hours of sleep every night. But fibromyalgia can make it hard to fall asleep and stay asleep. Talk to your doctor about any sleep problems you have and ways to treat them. Your doctor may recommend:
Going to bed at the same time and getting up at the same time every day
Not drinking caffeine, alcohol, or eating spicy meals before bedtime
Not taking daytime naps
Doing relaxing activities, such as listening to soft music or taking a warm bath, that prepare your body for sleep.
Reducing stress. Stress can trigger a flare-up of fibromyalgia symptoms. Strategies such as meditation, massage, and talk therapy may help. Get tips on relieving stress.
Getting regular physical activity. Pain and fatigue may make exercise and daily activities harder to do. But studies show that for many women with fibromyalgia, regular physical activity can reduce pain. Any activity, even walking around your home or neighborhood, can help relieve your symptoms. Start at a very low level, and slowly increase the amount of activity you get.
Trying complementary or alternative therapies. Some women say their symptoms got better from trying complementary or alternative therapies, such as:
Physical therapy
Massage
Myofascial release therapy
Acupuncture
Relaxation exercises
Tai chi
Yoga
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (13)
Fibromyalgia: Strategies to Help
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Managing the Pain of Fibromyalgia
Video by Lee Health/YouTube
Manage Stress
Image by TheVisualMD
Sleep Helps Control Stress
Sleep Helps Control Stress : Cortisol, a key stress hormone, is hypersensitive to sleep loss. Even if we miss a few hours of sleep one night, our natural stress response is affected, and our cortisol levels are higher than usual the next day. Short-term irritability and distress result from the disruption of stress hormones as well as frustration with fatigue`s effects on motor skills and memory.
Image by TheVisualMD
Managing stress and your cortisol - Making Choices
Stress can be a major factor in depression and anxiety, which frequently occur together. If you have depression it makes sense to alleviate stress as much as possible. Physiological stress is brought on by the action of your sympathetic nervous system. When you feel threatened or are in a dangerous situation, the sympathetic nervous system’s “fight or flight” response takes over. This happens primarily through adrenergic stimulation, which involves the neurotransmitters epinephrine (adrenaline), norepinephrine (noradrenaline), and others. Activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis produces the “stress hormone,” cortisol.
Image by TheVisualMD
Beat Stress with Mindful Awareness
Meditation, yoga, group therapy—find the area of focus that helps you overcome stress. What is mindful awareness? It is, at heart, a catch-all term for many activities that emphasize focus on your physical, mental and emotional being. Yoga, various forms of meditation, tai chi, positive visualization, and different kinds of therapy all have in common the goal of quieting the mind, paying attention to the body, and restoring the spirit. That may sound unscientific, or even antiscientific, when in fact the scientific evidence for the benefits of mindful awareness practices are growing by the day. Group Therapy: One of the most stressed out populations in the modern world, military combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder, were found to benefit from a group therapy structure that required them to share their experiences with other vets. Groups of 9 to 11 troops spent a total of 60 or more hours together over 18 weeks, discussing their wartime memories and other aspects of their lives. Each gave two 2 ½-hour talks about their experience, and listened to recordings of their presentations 10 times. An impressive 81 percent of participants showed “clinically significant improvement” in stress symptoms after the group experience, an effect that remained steady six months after the group adjourned. For some, just hearing that others had frozen under fire or felt helpless alleviated the guilt or shame they had felt about doing the same. The power of group counseling is often in discovering that others who have faced the same kind of stress you face have found ways to cope, and are working to improve, just as you are. Meditation: In a study, 133 healthy adults volunteered to learn meditation techniques to reduce stress. They took a variety of mood and psychological assessments. Then they learned a simple meditation technique involving focusing on a single, meaningful word, called a mantra. The students met four times for one hour each meeting in small groups, and were instructed to practice the meditation for 15-20 minutes twice a day. After the instruction period, student scores on the mood and psychological assessments improved. Their perceived stress, mood states, anxiety inventory and brief symptom inventory scores all improved. Those who had practiced most frequently had the greatest improvement. Yoga: Emotionally distressed women volunteered to participate in a 3-month yoga program to relieve stress. The subjects took multiple assessment tools to measure their perceived stress, anxiety, mood, relative depression, well-being, physical status and more. Their levels of salivary cortisol, the stress hormone, were also measured. They met twice a week for a 90-minute Iyengar yoga class. Compared with volunteers who had been put on a waiting list for the class, the yoga students showed pronounced improvements in all of the assessment areas measured. Their cortisol levels dropped after participation in a class, and those who had suffered from headache or back pain reported significant pain relief. Choosing a Practice: Mindful awareness is about your individual mind, stressors and lifestyle. Find an approach that appeals to you, and see if you can sit in on a class or group meeting before committing to an intervention. The medical establishment has not always accepted the notion that some of these practices could improve your health and longevity. But all of that is changing in the face of compelling research about the connections between the mind and body.
Image by TheVisualMD
Sleep Cycle - Why Is Sleep Important?
The Sleep Cycle : Sleep can be divided into two types: rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, and non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. Most dreaming occurs during REM sleep. Normally, your sleep proceeds in cycles of REM and NREM sleep, in this order: N1 → N2 → N3 → N2 → REM. This represents one cycle. N1 is light sleep. In N2, consciousness of the outside world disappears. N3 is deep sleep. Night terrors and sleepwalking take place in N3. When one cycle is completed, another starts, beginning again with stage N1. A complete sleep cycle takes about 90-110 minutes. A night`s sleep may include four to six sleep cycles.
Image by TheVisualMD
Fibromyalgia & Diet | Mediterranean vs. Vegan vs. Hypocaloric vs. Low FODMAP vs. Gluten-Free Diets
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How you can treat and manage Fibromyalgia
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Fibromyalgia - Akron Children's Hospital video
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Fibromyalgia: How to Manage Chronic Pain
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Non-drug Strategies for Fibromyalgia - Dr Deepak Ravindran
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Massage Techniques for Fibromyalgia
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Fibromyalgia: Strategies to Help
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Managing the Pain of Fibromyalgia
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Manage Stress
TheVisualMD
Sleep Helps Control Stress
TheVisualMD
Managing stress and your cortisol - Making Choices
TheVisualMD
Beat Stress with Mindful Awareness
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Sleep Cycle - Why Is Sleep Important?
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Fibromyalgia & Diet | Mediterranean vs. Vegan vs. Hypocaloric vs. Low FODMAP vs. Gluten-Free Diets
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How you can treat and manage Fibromyalgia
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3:22
Fibromyalgia - Akron Children's Hospital video
AkronChildrens/YouTube
5:50
Fibromyalgia: How to Manage Chronic Pain
Pfizer/YouTube
5:48
Non-drug Strategies for Fibromyalgia - Dr Deepak Ravindran
Dr Deepak Ravindran/YouTube
3:40
Massage Techniques for Fibromyalgia
ExpertVillage Leaf Group/YouTube
Will It Get Better with Time?
MAYBE/Yes/No
Image by geralt/Pixabay
MAYBE/Yes/No
Image by geralt/Pixabay
Will Fibromyalgia Get Better with Time?
Maybe. Fibromyalgia is a chronic disease that is often a lifelong condition. But fibromyalgia is not a progressive disease, meaning it will not get worse over time. It also does not cause damage to your joints, muscles, or organs.
Taking steps to treat fibromyalgia can help relieve your symptoms.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (5)
Fibromyalgia comorbid conditions
Comorbid conditions of Fibromyalgia (FMS) are ME/CFS which is the most common; autoimmune diseases; migraines; Multiple Chemical Sensitivities (MCS); and orthostatic intolerance (OI) / Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS). Depression and anxiety; digestive conditions and menstrual problems; GWI; nervous system disorders; POTS and Low BP; other pain conditions and migraines; and sleep dysfunction/disturbance all overlap with FMS.
Image by MEcfsFMS/Wikimedia
Julie Goodwin: Massage Therapy and Fibromyalgia
Video by amtamassage/YouTube
How to Reduce the Pain of Fibromyalgia
Video by Howcast/YouTube
Nutrition 101 : How to Eat for Fibromyalgia
Video by ehowhealth/YouTube
The Best Diet for Fibromyalgia and Other Chronic Pain Relief
Video by NutritionFacts.org/YouTube
Fibromyalgia comorbid conditions
MEcfsFMS/Wikimedia
2:46
Julie Goodwin: Massage Therapy and Fibromyalgia
amtamassage/YouTube
1:45
How to Reduce the Pain of Fibromyalgia
Howcast/YouTube
2:12
Nutrition 101 : How to Eat for Fibromyalgia
ehowhealth/YouTube
7:01
The Best Diet for Fibromyalgia and Other Chronic Pain Relief
NutritionFacts.org/YouTube
How Does Fibromyalgia Affect Pregnancy?
Conditions that Can Cause Back Pain
Image by TheVisualMD
Conditions that Can Cause Back Pain
Conditions that Can Cause Back Pain
Image by TheVisualMD
How Does Fibromyalgia Affect Pregnancy?
Many women with fibromyalgia have no problems getting pregnant, and some women report that their symptoms get better during pregnancy.
But, for some women, fibromyalgia can cause problems during pregnancy. Your symptoms may flare or get worse, especially in the first few months of pregnancy. Also, some normal pregnancy complaints, such as fatigue, stress, and mood swings caused by changing hormones, may be worse for women with fibromyalgia.
Talk to your doctor about any medicines you take to treat fibromyalgia, as they may cause other health problems for you or your unborn baby.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (1)
Planning a Pregnancy with Fibromyalgia: What to expect?
Video by Carenity US/YouTube
3:40
Planning a Pregnancy with Fibromyalgia: What to expect?
Carenity US/YouTube
Fibromyalgia vs Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Would you believe me if I told you I was in agonizing pain right now?
Image by StoryMD
Would you believe me if I told you I was in agonizing pain right now?
What Is the Difference Between Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome?
Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and fibromyalgia are similar in many ways. A person can have fibromyalgia and ME/CFS. Both ME/CFS and fibromyalgia have pain and fatigue as symptoms.
But the main symptom of fibromyalgia is pain, and the main symptom of ME/CFS is extreme tiredness that does not get better with sleep and rest, also called fatigue.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (5)
How Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Are Related
Video by Mayo Clinic/YouTube
Are you suffering from fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue?
Video by News4JAX The Local Station/YouTube
FIBROMYALGIA OR CHRONIC FATIGUE?
Video by Ivanhoe Web/YouTube
Fibromyalgia – A Complex, Misunderstood Condition
Video by Pfizer/YouTube
Chronic Fatigue, Fibromyalgia & Long Covid - Are They Connected?
Video by Dr Deepak Ravindran/YouTube
3:46
How Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Are Related
Mayo Clinic/YouTube
2:08
Are you suffering from fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue?
News4JAX The Local Station/YouTube
1:36
FIBROMYALGIA OR CHRONIC FATIGUE?
Ivanhoe Web/YouTube
4:46
Fibromyalgia – A Complex, Misunderstood Condition
Pfizer/YouTube
6:15
Chronic Fatigue, Fibromyalgia & Long Covid - Are They Connected?
Dr Deepak Ravindran/YouTube
Will I Still Be Able to Work?
MRI of fibromyalgia
Image by Chemin Lin, Shwu-Hua Lee, Hsu-Huei Weng/Wikimedia
MRI of fibromyalgia
Sagittal, coronal, and axial sections of regions of gray matter reduction in fibromyalgia compared with normal controls ((a) left medial prefrontal cortex and (b) right dorsal posterior cingulate cortex). Results are from the activation likelihood estimation. Activation is significant at p < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons using the false discovery rate.
Image by Chemin Lin, Shwu-Hua Lee, Hsu-Huei Weng/Wikimedia
Will I Still Be Able to Work with Fibromyalgia?
Usually. Most people with fibromyalgia continue to work, but you may have to make changes to do so. You can cut down the number of hours you work, switch to a less demanding job, or adapt a current job. If you face challenges at work, an occupational therapist can help you design a more comfortable workstation or find more efficient and less painful ways to do your job. A number of federal laws protect your rights.
However, if you cannot work because of your fibromyalgia, you may qualify for disability benefits through your employer or the Social Security Administration.
Source: Office on Women's Health (OWH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Additional Materials (2)
Lady Gaga Has Postponed Her Tour Because Of Fibromyalgia: Here’s What To Know About Condition | TIME
Video by TIME/YouTube
Fibromyalgia: 3 Strategies for Workplace Success
Video by HealthyWomen/YouTube
1:40
Lady Gaga Has Postponed Her Tour Because Of Fibromyalgia: Here’s What To Know About Condition | TIME
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Fibromyalgia and Women
Fibromyalgia is a condition that causes aches and pain all over the body. People with fibromyalgia often experience extreme tiredness or sleeping, mood, or memory problems. Between 80 and 90 percent of people with fibromyalgia are women. Learn more about fibromyalgia symptoms and treatments in women.