WOULDN'T THIS JUST PUT FIBRO ON THE RADAR!!!.
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Taken from m.medicalxpresscom
New UK research could lead to a blood test to diagnose the common pain condition, fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia is common pain syndrome causing widespread muscle and bone pain, as well as fatigue and disturbed sleep. It has no obvious physical cause, is poorly understood and difficult to diagnose, treat and manage. For years there was doubt among the medical profession whether fibromyalgia actually existed – except in the minds of patients.
There is still no specific blood test, scan or x-ray that can confirm a diagnosis of the common pain syndrome, although blood tests are often carried out to rule out other conditions.
Now scientists at King's College London, funded by a three year grant of £171,000 from Arthritis Research UK, are hoping their latest research will lead to a reliable blood test to enable doctors to make a proper diagnosis.
The research team will examine samples and measurements taken from 400 twin volunteers from the 13,000 Twins UK Bioresource in which one twin has chronic widespread pain, to try to identify biomarkers in the DNA associated with the condition. It will be compared with the DNA of their healthy twin, to establish differences.
"Currently there is no blood test for fibromyalgia which makes diagnosis difficult," explained lead researcher Dr Frances Williams. "And treatment is limited, and in many cases unsatisfactory.
"Our research will help patients in two ways. First it will contribute to our understanding of how fibromyalgia – and other chronic pain syndromes such as irritable bowel syndrome – develop – and point to pain pathways, which we may not have suspected.
"Secondly, we hope it will lead to identification of a biomarker which we could work into a blood test. As well as enabling the condition to be diagnosed more effectively, it could help to 'stratify' patients into groups depending on disease severity, which will help in clinical trials of potential new treatments. It might even help us predict how the condition will progress."
Fibromyalgia is known to have genetic influences but there are many complicated steps between the genes which are responsible for fibromyalgia and the condition itself. The King's team hopes to explore these steps in more detail and shed light on the underlying biology of the condition.
Specifically, this study will focus on identifying markers on the outside of DNA that are associated with the switching on or off certain genes. DNA 'switching' is very important to health, as it prevents inappropriate processes from occurring in the body when they should not.
The project aims to assess the profile of DNA markers in healthy and affected twins. If there is a difference between these marker profiles on certain DNA regions associated with chronic pain onset between twins, then this DNA marker could be used as an indicator for disease.
Dr Natalie Carter, head of research liaison at Arthritis Research UK commented: "Fibromyalgia is notoriously difficult to diagnose and treat, partly because we know so little about why it occurs and how it progresses. Being able to diagnose it would be a major step forward, and understanding more about the influence of genetics will allow us to develop treatments specifically for people with fibromyalgia in the future."
6 likes, 23 replies
jadre14748 christine26761
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christine26761 jadre14748
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glad you joined this blog..you will find much help..so blog till your hearts content...and never think what you have to say is not important..it is, as are you....
chrissyboo jadre14748
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I feel for you and know just what your going through. My doctor is completely useless and the one before was even worse, actually neglectful. Pain clinic was a waste of time for me as they just didnt understand and kept telling me to push myself with exercise even though the tiny levels i was doing left me unable to move, how do you push yourself when you can't move ? And they got all the levels of my medication wrong. Anyway just to let you know your not alone
Krissy
christine26761 chrissyboo
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Bee70 christine26761
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Interesting read !! Fingers x and hope positive outcomes come from this research in the month, years ! x
christine26761 Bee70
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bronwyn97278 christine26761
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christine26761 bronwyn97278
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Maggers christine26761
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tiswas24537 christine26761
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and not being belived is for me one of the hardest things to put up with
its cruel condition because no matter how many blood tests you have
nothing seems to come back ,other than border line
as border line levals veriy from county to county its abit worrying,
border line should have a set leval all over the country .
then maybe doctors would see apattern
clurbur tiswas24537
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I agree entirely with the borderline debate.
I've been borderline Gout, RA and Lupus on blood tests on the last 2 years, I keep being told bloods aren't definitive in diagnosis, however no one will commit to any illness at any stage.
My Fibromyalgia diagnosis was only given after it was proven not to be RA Sero Positive but I've since been advised you can be negative and still have RA and my blood cell count and degenerative joints point towards it but no one will actually say yes it is.
So in some respects it's great medical research is been given to Fibro but similarly I hope it isn't just a other tool that confuses the diagnosis further.
I guess I'm cynical because some medical professionals go off results only and some off their knowledge, experience and understanding of their patient and their ailments!
tiswas24537 clurbur
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is the attidude of most doctors
keep us in the dark
and feed us bull s---
Meg53 christine26761
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I have only been diagnosed in the last year, after the merry go round of visiting various different specialists, including one who said it was probably in my head! It took a Professor in a pain clinic to finally give me a concrete diagnosis. So any test that could positively diagnose the condition may help future sufferers to a more speedy diagnosis and may also help find more effective treatment regimes.
Meg53
bronwyn97278 Meg53
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christine26761 Meg53
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christine26761 bronwyn97278
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bronwyn97278 christine26761
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christine26761 bronwyn97278
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Bee70 bronwyn97278
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Totally agree, after over 20 years of suffering and NOT knowing the cause and then finally I received my diagnosis of Fibromyalgia......I was such a relief to have a name put for my suffering. Since finding out and coming to terms with the help of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy it has changed my way of dealing with my pains. Although some days are so painful, I do have days where I am on top of the world. People on this forum too have been a blessing to me. Knowing that I am NOT alone and have all these friendly people supporting us all.
One day at a time with calm and positive thoughts are the best way to move forward. x
bronwyn97278 Bee70
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