QUOTE FOR TUESDAY:

“Fibromyalgia patients often have often have difficulty remaining productively employed on account increased pain  on activity, severe fatique, and problems with memory and concentration.”

National Fibromyalgia and Chronic Pain Association

 

Part II Fibromyalgia

 

Signs and Symptoms of Fibromyalgia:

Fibromyalgia is a physical disorder, not a psychological condition. The most common constellation of Fibromyalgia symptoms (widespread chronic muscle pain, sleeplessness, relentless fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, and a host of other overlapping conditions like TMJD, IBS, migraine, interstitial cystitis, metabolic syndrome, endometriosis, and vulvodynia) can wax and wane over time.

Symptoms include:

  • Tenderness to touch or pressure affecting muscles and sometimes joints or even the skin
  • Severe fatigue
  • Sleep problems (waking up unrefreshed)
  • Problems with memory or thinking clearly

Some patients also may have:

  • Depression or anxiety
  • Migraine or tension headaches
  • Digestive problems: irritable bowel syndrome (commonly called IBS) or gastroesophageal reflux disease (often referred to as GERD)
  • Irritable or overactive bladder
  • Pelvic pain
  • Temporomandibular disorder – often called TMJ (a set of symptoms including face or jaw pain, jaw clicking, and ringing in the ears)

How Fibromyalgia is diagnosed:

A doctor will suspect fibromyalgia based on your symptoms. Doctors may require that you have tenderness to pressure or tender points at a specific number of certain spots before saying you have fibromyalgia, but they are not required to make the diagnosis (see the Box). A physical exam can be helpful to detect tenderness and to exclude other causes of muscle pain. There are no diagnostic tests (such as X-rays or blood tests) for this problem. Yet, you may need tests to rule out another health problem that can be confused with fibromyalgia.

Because widespread body pain is the main feature of fibromyalgia, health care providers will ask you to describe your pain. This may help tell the difference between fibromyalgia and other diseases with similar symptoms. Other conditions such as hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid gland) and polymyalgia rheumatica sometimes mimic fibromyalgia. Blood tests can tell if you have either of these problems. Sometimes, fibromyalgia is confused with rheumatoid arthritis or lupus. But, again, there is a difference in the symptoms, physical findings and blood tests that will help your health care provider detect these health problems. Unlike fibromyalgia, these rheumatic diseases cause inflammation in the joints and tissues.

 

QUOTE FOR MONDAY:

“Fibromyalgia is a long-lasting or chronic disorder that causes muscle pain and fatigue (feeling tired).   Sometime you may have 2 or more chronic pain symptoms.”

National Institute of Arthritis and  Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

 

QUOTE FOR THE WEEKEND:

“It can cause your fingers to become stuck in place. It most commonly affects the ring & little fingers; can affect the proximal & middle joints,which are those closest to your palm, to become bent and difficult to straighten.
Healthline.com (Medically Reviewed by William A Morrison, MD on February 4, 2016 — Written by Cindie Slightham)

QUOTE FOR THURSDAY:

“About 3 out of 10 people have a change in the structure of their brains that causes the electrical storms of seizures. Idiopathic seizures are those whose cause is unknown. Unfortunately, about 6 out of 10 seizures are idiopathic.
In the case of focal seizures, we presume that there is an irritation to or scar on some part of the brain, but the scar is invisible to MRI. With generalized seizures, the genetic or metabolic abnormality is unidentified.”
Epilepsy Foundation (epilepsy.com)

QUOTE FOR MONDAY:

“Impairments resulting from Cerebral Palsy range in severity with the degree of injury to the brain.   The primary effect of Cerebral Palsy is impairment of muscle tone, gross and motor functions, control, coordination, reflexes, and posture. Oral motor dysfunction, such as swallowing and feeding difficulties, speech impairment.”

MyChild at CerebralPalsy.org

QUOTE FOR THE WEEKEND:

“Cerebral palsy is an umbrella term that refers to a group of disorders affecting a person’s ability to move. It is due to damage to the developing brain either during pregnancy or shortly after birth.  People who have cerebral palsy may also have visual, learning, hearing, speech, epilepsy and intellectual impairments.”

CerebralPalsyAlliance

QUOTE FOR FRIDAY:

“It is estimated that up to 48% of adults who meet criteria for ADHD may not have had a conversation about their symptoms with a healthcare provider.”

www.adhdadulthood.com

QUOTE FOR THURSDAY:

“Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a brain disorder marked by an ongoing pattern of inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity that interferes with functioning or development.”

NIH National Institute of Mental Health