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Causes_Diagnosis
| Date |
Article Rating |
Type |
Disease |
Title |
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Jun 13, 2003 |
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Article |
FM |
First Comes TMD, Then Fibromyalgia?
To further complicate diagnosis, new connections reveal TMD (temporomandibular disorders) may be related to fibromyalgia, according to a report in a recent 2003 issue of General Dentistry, the Academy of General Dentistry's (AGD) clinical, peer-reviewed journal. |
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Nov 07, 2005 |
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Article |
FM |
Vicious Cycle of Fibromyalgia and Emotional Impact: What to Do
Author and FM survivor Rosalie Devonshire writes, "If you had been a healthy, active person and develop fibromyalgia, the symptoms can create havoc in your life. Your inability to engage in activities you once enjoyed can cause you to become frustrated, angry, worried, or depressed. Your inability to meet the needs of your children, spouse, job, or community may contribute to a sense of inadequacy and worthlessness...These are all normal reactions to the losses you suffer when fibromyalgia strikes. You are not alone, however." |
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May 23, 2005 |
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Article |
FM |
To Be Young and Living with Pain: "Fibromyalgia wracks my body, but I won't let it ruin my life"'
Amy Chow writes, "I remember the exact moment I knew something was wrong. One day at ballet practice I noticed a sudden weakness in both my arms and couldn’t raise them over my head. And my back ached from top to bottom. Still, it was a complete surprise when, two years later, I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia. Like most people, I had no idea what that even was." |
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Apr 12, 2005 |
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Article |
FM |
Don't Just 'Live With It': Advances for Fibromyalgia Patients
Fibromyalgia can be difficult to diagnose and even harder to treat. But recent advances are ushering in a new era for sufferers. It took Deborah Gillaspie seven years and four doctors to learn that her chronic pain was due to fibromyalgia, and another seven years to find effective treatment. |
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Jul 12, 2004 |
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Article |
FM |
Posttraumatic Stress, Fibromyalgia Linked
The mysterious chronic pain condition fibromyalgia is widely thought of as a woman's disease, but new research suggests it is also common among men with posttraumatic stress disorder. |
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Jun 21, 2004 |
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Article |
FM |
Fibromyalgia: Explaining Unexplained Pain
Dr. John Winfield writes of fibromyalgia, "Best classified at the present time as one of a series of 'symptom-based conditions' or 'functional somatic syndromes,' recent research in the neurophysiology and neuroendocrinology of pain demonstrates that fibromyalgia is not simply a psychological disorder." |
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Jan 16, 2006 |
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Article |
FM |
Fibromyalgia: Practical Treatments for the Family Physician
Richard N. Podell, M.D., is a Clinical Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, in New Brunswick, NJ. In this insightful article, he discusses FM and its effective treatments at some length. |
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Aug 15, 2005 |
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Article |
FM |
The Link Between Fibromyalgia and Posture
According to Dr. Brian A. Rothbart, "all patients suffering from fibromyalgia need to have a postural evaluation as part of their examination." |
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Apr 26, 2004 |
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Article |
FM |
Fibromyalgia: The Answer Is Blowin' in the Wind
Dr. Kevin White quotes Bob Dylan in asking, "How many times can a man turn his head and pretend that he just doesn't see? These immortalized words have rung true repeatedly throughout the sordid history of humankind. Yet it should seem startling that Dylan's words might apply to physicians, who recite the Hippocratic Oath, and promise to ease pain and suffering and 'do no harm.' Nonetheless, these words too often do apply to physicians, perhaps no more frequently than when many such physicians are asked to deal with fibromyalgia (FM)." |
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Dec 11, 2002 |
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Article |
FM |
Post-Traumatic Fibromyalgia: A New Paradigm
Most of us are familiar with the grosser forms of brain injury associated with massive trauma. However, medical science has begun to identify a number of elusive, complex disorders, including fibromyalgia (FM), which result when the brain is subjected to even mild or moderate injury. These can be single episodes of trauma (i.e., an accident or injury) or a series of cumulative injuries that occur over time.
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