Concise reports
The relation between tender points and fibromyalgia symptom
variables: evidence that fibromyalgia is not a discrete disorder in the
clinic
Arthritis Research
Center and University of Kansas School of Medicine, Wichita, Kansas,
USA
Correspondence to: Professor F Wolfe, Arthritis Research Center, 1035 N Emporia, Suite 230, Wichita, KS 67214, USA.
Accepted for publication 10 January 1997
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the relation between
measures of pain threshold and symptoms of distress to determine if
fibromyalgia is a discrete construct/disorder in the clinic.
METHODS
627 patients seen at an outpatient
rheumatology centre from 1993 to 1996 underwent tender point and
dolorimetry examinations. All completed the assessment scales for
fatigue, sleep disturbance, anxiety, depression, global severity, pain,
functional disability, and a composite measure of distress constructed
from scores of sleep disturbance, fatigue, anxiety, depression, and
global severity
the rheumatology distress index (RDI).
RESULTS
In regression analyses, the RDI was
linearly related to the count of tender points
(r2=0.30). Lesser associations were found
between the RDI and dolorimetry measurements
(r2=0.08). The RDI was more strongly
correlated with the two measures of pain threshold than any of the
individual fibromyalgia symptom variables. In partial correlation
analyses, all of the information relating to symptom variables was
contained in the tender point count, and dolorimetry was not
independently related to symptoms.
CONCLUSION
Tender points are linearly related to
fibromyalgia variables and distress, and there is no discrete
enhancement or perturbation of fibromyalgia or distress variables
associated with very high levels of tender points. Although
fibromyalgia is a recognisable clinical entity, there seems to be no
rationale for treating fibromyalgia as a discrete disorder, and it
would seem appropriate to consider the entire range of tenderness and
distress in clinic patients as well as in research studies. The tender
point count functions as a `sedimentation rate' for distress, and is
a better measure than the dolorimetry score.
© 1997 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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