Literature DB >> 10025096

The fibromyalgia syndrome as a manifestation of neuroticism?

P Netter1, J Hennig.   

Abstract

After elucidating the components and theory of neuroticism (N) as well as of psychosomatic complaints and their relationships to personality dimensions and to psychosomatic diseases, comparisons are performed between patients suffering from fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) or related pain diseases with healthy subjects scoring high on personality dimensions related to neuroticism. FMS and pain patients score high on depression, anxiety, and experience of stress although questionnaire scores on depression are higher in subjects not exhibiting somatic features of the disease. High subjective pain sensitivity and low thresholds for pain perception are also common features in high N subjects and FMS patients. On the endocrinological level cortisol responses to challenge tests with CRH as well as prolactin responses to TRH are higher in FMS patients than in high N healthy subjects indicating an endocrinological difference. A common feature, however, is the lack of adaptability in the two groups, since neurotics are in particular characterized by a low capacity to shift their behavior from one state to the other (waking-sleeping, working-relaxing), to re-adapt to baseline levels after endocrinological or physiological stress responses, or to adjust to conditions of shift work. This is reflected by chronobiological disturbances in FMS patients and could also explain their maintainance of pain perception, because they are incapable of correcting conditioned pain-producing muscle tension.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 10025096     DOI: 10.1007/s003930050248

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Z Rheumatol        ISSN: 0340-1855            Impact factor:   1.372


  7 in total

1.  Clinical and evoked pain, personality traits, and emotional states: can familial confounding explain the associations?

Authors:  Eric Strachan; Brian Poeschla; Elizabeth Dansie; Annemarie Succop; Laura Chopko; Niloofar Afari
Journal:  J Psychosom Res       Date:  2014-10-02       Impact factor: 3.006

2.  Socioeconomic disparities in pain: the role of economic hardship and daily financial worry.

Authors:  Rebeca Rios; Alex J Zautra
Journal:  Health Psychol       Date:  2011-01       Impact factor: 4.267

3.  Fibromyalgia: evidence for deficits in positive affect regulation.

Authors:  Alex J Zautra; Robert Fasman; John W Reich; Peter Harakas; Lisa M Johnson; Maureen E Olmsted; Mary C Davis
Journal:  Psychosom Med       Date:  2005 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 4.312

4.  Weather and the pain in fibromyalgia: are they related?

Authors:  E A Fors; H Sexton
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 19.103

5.  Ghrelin plasmatic levels in patients with fibromyalgia.

Authors:  Miguel Otero; Ruben Nogueiras; Francisca Lago; Juan Meijide; Juan Amarelo; Antonio Mera; Juan Gomez-Reino; Oreste Gualillo
Journal:  Rheumatol Int       Date:  2003-09-05       Impact factor: 2.631

6.  Factors explaining variance in perceived pain in women with fibromyalgia.

Authors:  Eva Albertsen Malt; Snorri Olafsson; Anders Lund; Holger Ursin
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2002-04-25       Impact factor: 2.362

7.  Personality and fibromyalgia syndrome.

Authors:  Katrina Malin; Geoffrey O Littlejohn
Journal:  Open Rheumatol J       Date:  2012-09-07
  7 in total

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