Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just tell your chiropractor, primary care doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant about how you’re feeling and have the condition easily diagnosed and treated? With fibromyalgia (FM), it NEVER works that way! Some doctors even think FM is a mental issue and don’t believe it’s a “real” condition. Others over-diagnose everyone with FM and place them on medications that sometimes carry side effects that are worse than the condition itself. Let’s take a look at the diagnostic criteria for FM and discuss what you might expect in regards to tests....
The Diagnostic Guidelines for Fibromyalgia currently state three things:
1) Pain that is widespread in all four quadrants of your body.
2) Pain that has been present for at least three months.
3) There are no other diseases causing these symptoms. In other words, a patient's health history can satisfy the first two criteria and a physical examination and BLOOD TESTS rule out other diseases that can cause similar symptom-producing conditions. A commonly ordered blood test is a “CBC” (complete blood count), which tells if you have an infection (elevated white blood cells – WBCs) or if you are anemic (low red blood cells – RBCs, low hemoglobin, which makes the blood red).
Other tests may look for signs of rheumatoid arthritis, gout, a prior strep infection, lupus, inflammation, or Lyme disease. NONE of these tests tell if you have FM, but they do help determine if you have some other underlying condition that may be participating in the symptom picture.
However, there is a NEW
blood test that may predict fibromyalgia that was introduced in October
of 2013 at the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.
EpicGenetics of Santa Monica, CA calls it the “FM/a” test, and it’s
being described as “…objective, very accurate, and definitive.” Because
of its high cost ($744) and short track record, it’s currently being
used primarily in the difficult-to-diagnose cases. The test works by
measuring proteins in the body that lessen pain (which were found to be
low in FM patients). Researchers ran this test on 100 lupus patients, 98
RA patients, 160 FM patients, and 119 healthy patients and found it
positive in 93% of KNOWN FM patients and negative 89% of non-FM
patients!
A simple/FREE “screen” called the
“Widespread Pain Index” (“Google” it) contains two main parts: 1) A pain
diagram where you can check off the body parts that hurt; 2a) a Symptom
Severity Score where you indicate your level of symptom severity over
the past week and 2b) where you check off “Other Symptoms” from a list.
There is a scoring method that is simple and described on the form that
result in two numbers to determine if you meet the “diagnostic
criteria.” We recommend starting with this approach. Print off
the form, fill it out and score it yourself, bring that to your doctor
of chiropractic, and then ask about your specific case. The MOST
important part of this process is the third criteria discussed above:
ruling out other conditions.