This randomized controlled trial investigates whether slow breathing techniques influence heart rate variability, exercise self-efficacy, and resistance exercise performance in women with fibromyalgia. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three breathing conditions (slow breathing with visual pacer, slow breathing without pacer, or spontaneous breathing) before performing a biceps curl resistance exercise. The study will examine how breathing patterns interact with psychological variables (anxiety sensitivity, pain catastrophizing, pain hypervigilance, and kinesiophobia) to affect physiological and performance outcomes.
Background: Fibromyalgia is considered one of the most representative central sensitivity syndromes, where central sensitization is the predominant characteristic. Resistance and strength training have demonstrated efficacy as therapeutic strategies for fibromyalgia patients. Slow breathing has been shown to reduce anxiety, perceived stress, and pain intensity while increasing heart rate variability (HRV), a biomarker of stress reactivity. The Fear-Avoidance Model of Pain demonstrates that anxiety sensitivity, pain catastrophizing, hypervigilance, and fear of pain/movement largely determine activity levels in chronic pain patients. However, no studies have examined how slow breathing interacts with these psychological variables to enhance resistance exercise performance in fibromyalgia patients. Study Design: Single-session, three-arm randomized controlled trial with parallel group assignment. Experimental Procedure: Phase 1 - Baseline Assessment: * Semi-structured interview for demographic and clinical information * Administration of self-report questionnaires (detailed below) * 5-minute baseline HRV measurement (seated, eyes open, spontaneous breathing) * Respiration rate inferred from HRV Phase 2 - Resistance Exercise Preparation: * Determination of optimal weight for biceps curl exercise using submaximal protocol * Warm-up: 3 minutes walking + 10 unloaded practice repetitions * Progressive weight testing to determine 50% 1-RM equivalent Phase 3 - Breathing Intervention (8 minutes): Participants randomly assigned to: * Condition A: Slow breathing with visual pacer (6 breaths/min: 4-sec inhale, 6-sec exhale) displayed continuously * Condition B: Slow breathing without pacer (same pattern, brief training then self-paced) * Condition C: Spontaneous breathing at participant's natural rate * HRV continuously recorded during all breathing conditions. Respiration rate inferred from HRV. Phase 4 - Resistance Exercise Test: * Biceps curl exercise at 50% estimated 1-RM * Maximum repetitions to voluntary exhaustion * Proper form maintained (back against wall, arms close to body, full range of motion) Phase 5 - Post-Exercise Assessment: * Immediate measurement of dependent variables (detailed below) * 8 min. of rest * HRV recording 5 min. Safety Monitoring: Continuous observation by trained evaluators; clear stopping criteria.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
159
Participants receive brief training using a visual pacer displayed on computer screen showing a line that rises during inhalation and falls during exhalation. The pacing is set to 6 respiratory cycles per minute (4 seconds inhalation, 6 seconds exhalation). Participants place one hand below chest and abdomen to monitor diaphragmatic movement. After training, participants continue slow breathing with the visual pacer continuously displayed, maintaining the prescribed respiratory rate.
Participants receive identical brief training using the visual pacer to learn the slow breathing pattern (6 cycles per minute: 4 seconds inhalation, 6 seconds exhalation). Hand placement below chest and abdomen to monitor diaphragmatic movement. After training, the visual pacer is removed and participants attempt to maintain the slow breathing pattern independently without external guidance.
Participants spend equivalent time breathing at their natural, spontaneous rate. They receive similar attention from evaluators but no specific breathing instructions. Participants are instructed to breathe normally at their usual pace and rhythm.
Asociación de Fibromialgia y Síndrome de Fatiga Crónica de Málaga (AFIBROMA)
Málaga, Málaga, Spain
Asociación de Pacientes de Fibromialgia y Síndrome de Fatiga Crónica de Málaga (APAFIMA)
Málaga, Málaga, Spain
Heart Rate Variability (HRV) - Change from Baseline
Root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD) in milliseconds
Time frame: Measured: 5 min baseline, 8 min during breathing intervention, and 5 min post-exercise recovery.
Number of Biceps Curl Repetitions
Number of properly executed biceps curl repetitions at 50% estimated 1-RM performed to voluntary exhaustion with proper form maintained.
Time frame: Immediately during the resistance exercise test (single session).
Exercise-Related Self-Efficacy
Single-item 0-10 numeric rating scale.
Time frame: Immediately post-exercise.
Fatigue
Borg Rating Of Perceived Exertion. Rating of perceived exertion is an outcome measure scale used to gauge one's exercise intensity without the need to rely on physiological parameters. The scale rates exertion from a scale of 6 (no exertion) to 20 (maximum effort).
Time frame: Immediately post-exercise
Change in Current Pain Intensity
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10
Time frame: Immediately post-exercise
Change in Anxiety
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10
Time frame: Immediately post-exercise.
Perceived effort required to do the biceps exercise
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10.
Time frame: Immediately post-exercise
Breathing Difficulty
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10
Time frame: Immediately after breathing intervention.
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