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Overlapping Conditions Among Patients With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and Temporomandibular Disorder

595

Citations

30

References

2000

Year

TLDR

Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and temporomandibular disorder share many clinical features—including myalgia, fatigue, and sleep disturbances—and frequently coexist with comorbid conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome, chronic tension‑type headache, and interstitial cystitis. The study aimed to determine the frequency of ten clinical conditions among patients with CFS, FM, and TMD compared with healthy controls, assessing past diagnoses and symptom manifestations against expert‑based and published criteria. Researchers recruited patients from hospital‑based clinics and healthy controls from a dermatology clinic, having all participants complete a 138‑item symptom checklist and a brief physical examination. Patients were markedly more likely than controls to meet lifetime diagnostic criteria for multiple comorbidities—particularly irritable bowel syndrome (92% in CFS, 77% in FM, 64% in TMD versus 18% in controls)—and shared core symptoms such as generalized pain sensitivity, sleep and concentration difficulties, bowel complaints, and headache, while some symptoms distinguished the patient groups.

Abstract

Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), fibromyalgia (FM), and temporomandibular disorder (TMD) share many clinical illness features such as myalgia, fatigue, sleep disturbances, and impairment in ability to perform activities of daily living as a consequence of these symptoms. A growing literature suggests that a variety of comorbid illnesses also may commonly coexist in these patients, including irritable bowel syndrome, chronic tension-type headache, and interstitial cystitis.To describe the frequency of 10 clinical conditions among patients with CFS, FM, and TMD compared with healthy controls with respect to past diagnoses, degree to which they manifested symptoms for each condition as determined by expert-based criteria, and published diagnostic criteria.Patients diagnosed as having CFS, FM, and TMD by their physicians were recruited from hospital-based clinics. Healthy control subjects from a dermatology clinic were enrolled as a comparison group. All subjects completed a 138-item symptom checklist and underwent a brief physical examination performed by the project physicians.With little exception, patients reported few past diagnoses of the 10 clinical conditions beyond their referring diagnosis of CFS, FM, or TMD. In contrast, patients were more likely than controls to meet lifetime symptom and diagnostic criteria for many of the conditions, including CFS, FM, irritable bowel syndrome, multiple chemical sensitivities, and headache. Lifetime rates of irritable bowel syndrome were particularly striking in the patient groups (CFS, 92%; FM, 77%; TMD, 64%) compared with controls (18%) (P<.001). Individual symptom analysis revealed that patients with CFS, FM, and TMD share common symptoms, including generalized pain sensitivity, sleep and concentration difficulties, bowel complaints, and headache. However, several symptoms also distinguished the patient groups.This study provides preliminary evidence that patients with CFS, FM, and TMD share key symptoms. It also is apparent that other localized and systemic conditions may frequently co-occur with CFS, FM, and TMD. Future research that seeks to identify the temporal relationships and other pathophysiologic mechanism(s) linking CFS, FM, and TMD will likely advance our understanding and treatment of these chronic, recurrent conditions.

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