Correlation between Different Psychological Variables in Women with Fibromyalgia with Symptoms of Neurogenic Inflammation: A Cross-Sectional Study
Víctor Riquelme-Aguado, Alazne Zabarte-del Campo, Guillermo Baviano-Klett, Josué Fernández-Carnero, Antonio Gil-Crujera, Francisco Gómez-Esquer

TL;DR
This study explores how psychological factors like depression and fear of movement are linked to pain and inflammation in women with fibromyalgia.
Contribution
The study reveals new correlations between psychological variables and pain modulation in fibromyalgia patients.
Findings
Moderate correlation exists between depression, fear of movement, and pain modulation ability in fibromyalgia patients.
Pain catastrophizing is inversely correlated with pain intensity and disability.
Strong correlations were found among various psychological variables in fibromyalgia patients.
Abstract
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome hypothesized to arise from a state of neurogenic inflammation. Mechanisms responsible for pain, as well as psychological variables, are typically altered in this condition. The main objective of this research was to explore somatosensory and psychological alterations in women with FM. The secondary objective was to carry out a secondary analysis to correlate the different variables studied and delve into the influences between them. The relationship between different psychological variables in fibromyalgia is not clear in the previous scientific literature. Forty-four individuals participated, of which twenty-two were controls and twenty-two were women with fibromyalgia. The main outcome measures were the Numeric Pain Rating Scale, Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire, pressure pain threshold, conditioned pain modulation, anxiety and depression…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOccupational Health and Safety Research
