Abstract

The clinical utility of tender point (TP) examination in patients reporting chronic widespread pain (CWP) is the subject of contemporary debate. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between mechanical hyperalgesia assessed by manual TP examination and clinical disease severity. 271 women with CWP were recruited from a clinical setting. Data collection included patient-reported symptoms, health-related quality of life variables, and observation-based measures of functional ability, muscle strength, 6-minute walk, and pressure pain thresholds measured by cuff algometry. TP examination was conducted according to ACR-guidelines. Relationships between disease variables and TP count (TPC) were analyzed with logistic regression in a continuum model, allowing the TPC to depend on the included disease variables and two regression models carried out for a TPC threshold level, varying between 1 and 17. The threshold analyses indicated a TPC threshold at 8, above which a large number of disease variables became consistently significant explanatory factors, whereas none of the disease variables reached a significance level in the continuum model. These results support the premise that the presence of mechanical hyperalgesia influences symptomatology in CWP and that the severity of clinical expression is related to a threshold of TPs, rather than being part of a continuum.

Highlights

  • Fibromyalgia is a characterized subgroup of patients presenting with chronic widespread pain (CWP) and widespread mechanical hyperalgesia

  • TP count (TPC) were analyzed with a logistic regression model, allowing the TPC to depend on the included disease variables from the ICF-measurement framework

  • Our results indicate that functional ability, whether related to ADL performance or working ability in the multivariate context, provides a stronger correlation to TPC than level of pain

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Summary

Introduction

Fibromyalgia is a characterized subgroup of patients presenting with chronic widespread pain (CWP) and widespread mechanical hyperalgesia. The 1990-ACR criteria cutoff at 11 TPs, based on a score of mild or greater tenderness, International Journal of Rheumatology has been criticized for placing a diagnosis of fibromyalgia at the far end of a severity spectrum and for ignoring other key symptoms [7,8,9]. This has led to the suggestion of diagnostic criteria based on pain and typical fibromyalgia symptoms, but omitting the evaluation of mechanical hyperalgesia [9]. A contrary opinion is that fibromyalgia is both a categorical disorder and the end of a continuum of pain processing [10]

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