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The American Journal of the Medical Sciences:
June 1998 - Volume 315 - Issue 6 - pp 405-412
Fibromyalgia Symposium

Current Concepts in the Pathophysiology of Abnormal Pain Perception in Fibromyalgia

WEIGENT, DOUGLAS A. PhD; BRADLEY, LAURENCE A. PhD; BLALOCK, J. EDWIN PhD; ALARCON, GRACIELA S.

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Abstract

Fibromyalgia is a noninflammatory rheumatic disorder characterized by chronic widespread musculoskeletal pain. Although many studies have described the pain and other clinical symptoms associated with this disorder, the primary mechanisms underlying the etiology of fibromyalgia remain elusive. This article reviews recent data supporting the links among each of three systems-the musculoskeletal system, the neuroendocrine system, and the central nervous system (CNS), all of which appear to play major roles in fibromyalgia pathophysiology-and pain in fibromyalgia, and concludes by presenting a model of the pathophysiology of abnormal pain perception in fibromyalgia which integrates the research findings described.

© Copyright 1998 Southern Society for Clinical Investigation

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