Literature DB >> 12649396

Fibromyalgia and the therapeutic domain. A philosophical study on the origins of fibromyalgia in a specific social setting.

I Hazemeijer1, J J Rasker.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Fibromyalgia has always attracted controversy. Wolfe states that fibromyalgia will always exist regardless of the name given to the syndrome. Hadler describes fibromyalgia as a form of illness behaviour escalated by labelling. However, we believe that fibromyalgia, as other functional somatic syndromes, is not waiting below the surface until it becomes manifest by labelling.
METHODS: We developed our hypothesis on the relationship between a specific social setting (called the therapeutic domain) and fibromyalgia using empirical philosophical arguments based on Foucault and Hacking. A therapeutic domain is a real and heterogeneous medical domain in which people, their thoughts and practices, and medical technology in any form coexist and communicate. In this domain blood is aspirated, radiographs are taken and classification criteria are made and applied. It is a domain where patient and therapist have initiated a relationship, which is influenced by the media and political pressure. This results in a looping effect where classification criteria and images give structure to perceptions and form the description for human behaviour; the person thus diagnosed (!) constantly has to grow into the conformity of these classification criteria, which also have to be constantly revised. The fibromyalgia concept becomes manifest in an individual as non-specific aches and pains along with other features.
RESULTS: In other times and settings this resulted in analogue syndromes like railway spine, telegraph wrists, neurocirculatory asthenia or perhaps repetitive strain injury. In the application of American College of Rheumatology fibromyalgia classification criteria, labels and medical technology it is possible that invisible experiences manifest themselves in a therapeutic domain. It is not only a phenotype induced by the physician, but in this domain a certain power creates reality making the 'disease' become manifest.
CONCLUSION: The only certainty in fibromyalgia is that it is still being diagnosed. For prevention and treatment of fibromyalgia, doctors as well as politicians and media have to start by fundamentally changing the therapeutic domain. In such a renewed setting, fibromyalgia cannot become manifest in an individual and thus fibromyalgia syndrome can no longer exist. A firm public message that symptoms can be psychological in origin to prevent their spread, as Wessely recently stated in the comparable case of mass psychogenic illness, is only a part of the answer.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12649396     DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keg129

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)        ISSN: 1462-0324            Impact factor:   7.580


  12 in total

1.  Arthritic syndromes that defy diagnosis.

Authors:  George E Ehrlich
Journal:  Inflammopharmacology       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 4.473

2.  Increased absence due to sickness among employees with fibromyalgia.

Authors:  M Kivimäki; P Leino-Arjas; L Kaila-Kangas; M Virtanen; M Elovainio; S Puttonen; L Keltikangas-Järvinen; J Pentti; J Vahtera
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2006-06-22       Impact factor: 19.103

3.  Cursing the darkness: reactions to fibromyalgia.

Authors:  Manfred Harth
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2013 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.037

4.  Randomized, blinded, controlled trial on effectiveness of photobiomodulation therapy and exercise training in the fibromyalgia treatment.

Authors:  Mariana Moreira da Silva; Regiane Albertini; Paulo de Tarso Camillo de Carvalho; Ernesto Cesar Pinto Leal-Junior; Sandra Kalil Bussadori; Stella Sousa Vieira; Danilo Sales Bocalini; Luis Vicente Franco de Oliveira; Vanessa Grandinetti; José Antonio Silva; Andrey Jorge Serra
Journal:  Lasers Med Sci       Date:  2017-11-23       Impact factor: 3.161

5.  Fibromyalgia and the therapeutic relationship: where uncertainty meets attitude.

Authors:  Sean M Hayes; Genevieve C Myhal; John F Thornton; Monique Camerlain; Cynthia Jamison; Kayla N Cytryn; S Murray
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2010 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.037

6.  Feelings of guilt and shame in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  Peter M Ten Klooster; Lieke C A Christenhusz; Erik Taal; Frank Eggelmeijer; Jan-Maarten van Woerkom; Johannes J Rasker
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2014-02-09       Impact factor: 2.980

7.  Medically unexplained symptoms.

Authors:  S L Mackie; A O Frank
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 18.000

Review 8.  Fibromyalgia and disability adjudication: no simple solutions to a complex problem.

Authors:  Manfred Harth; Warren R Nielson
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.037

9.  Fibromyalgia diagnosis and biased assessment: Sex, prevalence and bias.

Authors:  Frederick Wolfe; Brian Walitt; Serge Perrot; Johannes J Rasker; Winfried Häuser
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-09-13       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The Problematic Nature of Fibromyalgia Diagnosis in the Community.

Authors:  Sachin Srinivasan; Eamon Maloney; Brynn Wright; Michael Kennedy; K James Kallail; Johannes J Rasker; Winfried Häuser; Frederick Wolfe
Journal:  ACR Open Rheumatol       Date:  2019-03-15
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