Literature DB >> 14620489

Signification and pain: a semiotic reading of fibromyalgia.

John Quintner1, David Buchanan, Milton Cohen, Andrew Taylor.   

Abstract

Patients with persistent pain who lack a detectable underlying disease challenge the theories supporting much of biomedical body-mind discourse. In this context, diagnostic labeling is as inherently vulnerable to the same pitfalls of uncertainty that beset any other interpretative endeavour. The end point is often no more than a name rather than the discovered essence of a pre-existent medical condition. In 1990 a Committee of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) formulated the construct of Fibromyalgia in an attempt to rectify a situation of diagnostic confusion faced by patients presenting with widespread pain. It was proposed that Fibromyalgia existed as a "specific entity", separable from but curiously able to co-exist with any other painful condition. Epistemological and semiotic analyses of Fibromyalgia have failed to find any sign, clinical or linguistic, which could differentiate it from other diffuse musculoskeletal pain states. The construct of Fibromyalgia sought to define a discernable reality outside the play of language and to pass it off as a natural phenomenon. However, because it has failed both clinically and semiotically, the construct also fails the test of medical utility for the subject in persistent pain.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14620489     DOI: 10.1023/a:1026061420192

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth        ISSN: 1386-7415


  9 in total

1.  Fibromyalgia falls foul of a fallacy.

Authors:  J L Quintner; M L Cohen
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1999-03-27       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 2.  Fibromyalgia: where are we a decade after the American College of Rheumatology classification criteria were developed?

Authors:  Leslie J Crofford; Daniel J Clauw
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2002-05

Review 3.  Finding pain between minds and bodies.

Authors:  M D Sullivan
Journal:  Clin J Pain       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 3.442

4.  Sucker-punched again! Physicians meet the disease-of-the-month syndrome.

Authors:  E Shorter
Journal:  J Psychosom Res       Date:  1995-02       Impact factor: 3.006

Review 5.  Neuronal plasticity: increasing the gain in pain.

Authors:  C J Woolf; M W Salter
Journal:  Science       Date:  2000-06-09       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  Development of criteria for the diagnosis of fibrositis.

Authors:  F Wolfe
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1986-09-29       Impact factor: 4.965

Review 7.  Fibromyalgia syndrome, a problem of tautology.

Authors:  M L Cohen; J L Quintner
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1993-10-09       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 8.  The fibromyalgia syndrome: a consensus report on fibromyalgia and disability.

Authors:  F Wolfe
Journal:  J Rheumatol       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 4.666

9.  The American College of Rheumatology 1990 Criteria for the Classification of Fibromyalgia. Report of the Multicenter Criteria Committee.

Authors:  F Wolfe; H A Smythe; M B Yunus; R M Bennett; C Bombardier; D L Goldenberg; P Tugwell; S M Campbell; M Abeles; P Clark
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  1990-02
  9 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  Mishel's Model of Uncertainty Describing Categories and Subcategories in Fibromyalgia Patients, a Scoping Review.

Authors:  Ana Fernandez-Araque; Julia Gomez-Castro; Andrea Giaquinta-Aranda; Zoraida Verde; Clara Torres-Ortega
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-05-26       Impact factor: 3.390

  1 in total

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