PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Men with fibromyalgia often go undiagnosed, Mayo Clinic study suggests

2012-12-19
(Press-News.org) ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Fibromyalgia is a complex illness to diagnose and to treat. There is not yet a diagnostic test to establish that someone has it, there is no cure and many fibromyalgia symptoms -- pain, fatigue, problems sleeping and memory and mood issues -- can overlap with or get mistaken for other conditions. A new Mayo Clinic study suggests that many people who have fibromyalgia, especially men, are going undiagnosed. The findings appear in the online edition of the journal Arthritis Care & Research.

More research is needed, particularly on why men who reported fibromyalgia symptoms were less likely than women to receive a fibromyalgia diagnosis, says lead author Ann Vincent, M.D., medical director of Mayo Clinic's Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Clinic.

"Health care providers may not think of this diagnosis when face to face with a male patient with musculoskeletal pain and fatigue," Dr. Vincent says. "These findings need to be explored further."

Researchers focused on Olmsted County, Minn., home to a comprehensive medical records pool known as the Rochester Epidemiology Project, and used multiple methods to try to get at the number of people over age 21 with fibromyalgia.

They used the epidemiology project to identify just over 3,000 patients who looked like they might have fibromyalgia: Roughly a third had a documented fibromyalgia diagnosis. That amounted to 1.1 percent of the county's population 21 and older.

In the second method, researchers randomly surveyed Olmsted County adults using the American College of Rheumatology's fibromyalgia research survey criteria. The criteria include the hallmarks of fibromyalgia: widespread pain and tenderness, fatigue, feeling unrested after waking, problems with memory or thinking clearly and depression or anxiety, among other symptoms. Of the 830 who responded to the survey, 44, or 5.3 percent, met those criteria, but only a dozen had been diagnosed with fibromyalgia.

Based on the study's findings, the researchers estimate that 6.4 percent of people 21 and older in Olmsted County have fibromyalgia -- far more than have been officially diagnosed with it.

Fibromyalgia is more common in women, but men can get it too. The discrepancy between the number of people reporting fibromyalgia symptoms and the number actually diagnosed with the condition was greatest among men, the study found. Twenty times more men appeared to have fibromyalgia based on their survey response than had been diagnosed, while three times more women reported fibromyalgia symptoms than were diagnosed.

"It is important to diagnose fibromyalgia because we have effective treatments for the disorder," says co-author Daniel Clauw, M.D., director of the University of Michigan Health System Chronic Pain & Fatigue Research Center.

Studies also show that properly diagnosing people with fibromyalgia reduces health care costs, because they often need far less diagnostic testing and fewer referrals looking for the cause of their pain, Dr. Clauw says.

### The study was supported by National Institute on Aging award R01AG034676 and by the Mayo Clinic Center for Translational Science Activities; the center is funded in part by National Institutes of Health grant RR024150.

About Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about and www.mayoclinic.org/news.

Journalists can become a member of the Mayo Clinic News Network for the latest health, science and research news and access to video, audio, text and graphic elements that can be downloaded or embedded.

http://www.mayoclinic.org/news2012-rst/7221.html

Contact: Sharon Theimer
507-284-5005 (days)
507-284-2511 (evenings)
Email: newsbureau@mayo.edu


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

High-throughput sequencing shows potentially hundreds of gene mutations related to autism

2012-12-19
Genomic technology has revolutionized gene discovery and disease understanding in autism, according to an article published in the December 20 issue of the journal Neuron. The paper highlights the impact of a genomic technology called high-throughput sequencing (HTS) in discovering numerous new genes that are associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). "These new discoveries using HTS confirm that the genetic origins of autism are far more complex than previously believed," said Joseph D. Buxbaum, PhD, Director of the Seaver Autism Center at the Icahn School of ...

Auto-immune disease: The viral route is confirmed

2012-12-19
Why would our immune system turn against our own cells? This is the question that the combined Inserm/CNRS/ Pierre and Marie Curie University/Association Institut de Myologie have strived to answer in their "Therapies for diseases of striated muscle", concentrating in particular on the auto-immune disease known as myasthenia gravis. Through the project known as FIGHT-MG (Fight Myasthenia Gravis), financed by the European Commission and coordinated by Inserm, Sonia Berrih-Aknin and Rozen Le Panse have contributed proof of the concept that a molecule imitating a virus may ...

Toward a pill to enable celiac patients to eat foods containing gluten

2012-12-19
Scientists are reporting an advance toward development of a pill that could become celiac disease's counterpart to the lactase pills that people with lactose intolerance can take to eat dairy products without risking digestive upsets. They describe the approach, which involves an enzyme that breaks down the gluten that causes celiac symptoms, in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Justin Siegel, Ingrid Swanson Pultz and colleagues explain that celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder in which the gluten in wheat, rye or barley products causes inflammation in ...

A new, super-nutritious puffed rice for breakfast cereals and snacks

2012-12-19
A new process for blowing up grains of rice produces a super-nutritious form of puffed rice, with three times more protein and a rich endowment of other nutrients that make it ideal for breakfast cereals, snack foods and nutrient bars for school lunch programs, scientists are reporting. Their study appears in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. Syed S.H. Rizvi and colleagues explain that commercial puffed rice is made by steam extrusion. An extruder squeezes rice flour mixed with water through a narrow opening at high temperature and pressure. On exiting ...

Sustainable way to make a prized fragrance ingredient

2012-12-19
Large amounts of a substitute for one of the world's most treasured fragrance ingredients — a substance that also has potential anti-cancer activity — could be produced with a sustainable new technology, scientists are reporting. Published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, the advance enables cultures of bacteria to produce a substitute for natural ambergris, which sells for hundreds of dollars an ounce. Laurent Daviet, Michel Schalk and colleagues explain that ambergris, a waxy substance excreted by sperm whales, has been prized as a fragrance ingredient ...

Wine and tea are key ingredients in South African plan to grow domestic research

2012-12-19
The South African government is investing in scientific research to foster production of agricultural products like pinotage (the country's signature red wine) and honeybush (source of a tea so fragrant that a potful can perfume an entire house) to create jobs and boost the economy. That effort and others aimed at developing a globally competitive research enterprise are the topics of cover stories in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society. Britt E. Erickson, ...

University of Texas at Austin Team develops a microwave-assisted method for producing thin films

2012-12-19
Growth of new materials is the cornerstone of materials science - a highly inter-disciplinary field of science that touches every aspect of our lives from computers and cell phones to the clothes we wear. At the same time, the energy crisis has brought the spotlight on synthesis and growth of materials for clean energy technologies, such as solar cells and batteries. However, researchers in these areas do not simply grow materials —they assemble the atoms and molecules that form so-called thin films on various substrates. It is a process that is highly complex, time-consuming ...

Described a key mechanism in muscle regeneration

2012-12-19
Researchers at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) have described a new selective target in muscle regeneration. This is the association of alpha-enolase protein and plasmin. The finding could be used to develop new treatments to regenerate muscular injuries or dystrophies. The study has been published in PLOS ONE journal. Skeletal muscle has a great regeneration capacity after injury or genetic diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy, the most common neuromuscular disorder in children. This condition is due to a defect in the gene of dystrophin, ...

Experiencing discrimination increases risk-taking, anger, and vigilance

2012-12-19
Experiencing rejection not only affects how we think and feel — over the long-term it can also influence our physical and mental health. New research suggests that when rejection comes in the form of discrimination, people respond with a pattern of thoughts, behaviors, and physiological responses that may contribute to overall health disparities. "Psychological factors, like discrimination, have been suggested as part of the causal mechanisms that explain how discrimination gets 'under the skin' to affect health," says psychological scientist and senior researcher Wendy ...

UC Irvine study of leaping toads reveals muscle-protecting mechanism

2012-12-19
Irvine, Calif., Dec. 19, 2012 — Most people are impressed by how a toad jumps. UC Irvine biologist Emanuel Azizi is more impressed by how one lands. An assistant professor of ecology & evolutionary biology who specializes in muscle physiology and biomechanics, Azizi found that nature's favorite leapers possess a neuromuscular response that's specific to the intensity of a landing – a mechanism that protects muscles from injury upon impact. The research is helping reveal how the nervous system modulates motor control patterns involved with jumping and landing. Azizi's ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study finds moral costs in over-pricing for essentials

Australian scientists uncover secrets of yellow fever

Researchers develop high-performance biochar for efficient carbon dioxide capture

Biodegradable cesium nanosalts activate anti-tumor immunity via inducing pyroptosis and intervening in metabolism

Can bamboo help solve the plastic pollution crisis?

Voting behaviour in elections strongly linked to future risk of death

Significant variations in survival times of early onset dementia by clinical subtype

Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination

Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air

The science behind people who never forget a face

Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’

New effort launched to support earlier diagnosis, treatment of aortic stenosis

Registration and Abstract Submission Open for “20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future,” 20-22 October 2026, Kyoto, Japan

Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish

Engineering a clearer view of bone healing

Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors

Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma

Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods

USC researchers use AI to uncover genetic blueprint of the brain’s largest communication bridge

Tiny swarms, big impact: Researchers engineering adaptive magnetic systems for medicine, energy and environment

MSU study: How can AI personas be used to detect human deception?

Slowed by sound: A mouse model of Parkinson’s Disease shows noise affects movement

Demographic shifts could boost drug-resistant infections across Europe

Insight into how sugars regulate the inflammatory disease process

PKU scientists uncover climate impacts and future trends of hailstorms in China

Computer model mimics human audiovisual perception

AC instead of DC: A game-changer for VR headsets and near-eye displays

Prevention of cardiovascular disease events and deaths among black adults via systolic blood pressure equity

Facility-based uptake of colorectal cancer screening in 45- to 49-year-olds after US guideline changes

Scientists uncover hidden nuclear droplets that link multiple leukemias and reveal a new therapeutic target

[Press-News.org] Men with fibromyalgia often go undiagnosed, Mayo Clinic study suggests