Fibromyalgia (FM) is a disabling chronic disorder characterized by widespread muscle pain, fatigue, and multiple tender points, specific places on the body that become painful with only slight pressure. Pain associated with FM cannot be explained medically, often leading to a delayed diagnosis and delayed treatment. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how the nervous system, specifically the brain, processes pain in women with FM.
The cause of FM remains unknown, and more than half of all FM patients do not experience adequate pain relief from current treatment. Identifying the mechanisms of unexplained pain in people with FM is necessary to develop more beneficial treatments. One possible cause of FM may be associated with problems in how the body processes pain. People with FM appear to be hypersensitive to stimuli that normally are not painful. Specifically, the brain and spinal cord may not signal sensations correctly, resulting in abnormal pain sensations. This study will use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine how pain is processed in the brain of adults with FM compared with adults with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), another chronic disease characterized by long-term pain with a known cause. This study will also determine the effect that anticipation and attention have on the processing of nonpainful stimuli in women with FM and RA. Both groups of people will also be compared to a control group of healthy people. Participants in this study will include only women. This study will include two study visits that will occur on separate days. Each study visit will last from 2 to 3 hours. During the first study visit, participants will complete questionnaires. They will then rate heat stimuli applied to their hand and perform mental tasks while in a mock MRI machine. The mental tasks will consist of naming the color of words. Some participants will receive nonpainful heat stimuli; others will receive both painful and nonpainful heat stimuli. During the second study visit, participants will undergo the exact same procedures while in an actual MRI machine. There will be no follow-up visits for this study.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
137
University of Wisconsin - Madison
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
Brain responses to pain
The study determines brain responses to pain in both healthy participants and those with fibromyalgia under conditions designed to manipulate anticipation and attention.
Time frame: Single experimental session
Physical activity
The study measures physical activity the week prior to brain imaging
Time frame: one week
Brain white matter
The study measures white matter using diffusion tensor imaging methods
Time frame: single experimental session
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