Update Date: 26.04.2025
Fibromyalgia is a long-term condition that involves widespread body pain. The pain happens along with fatigue. It also can involve issues with sleep, memory and mood. Researchers think that fibromyalgia affects the way the brain and spinal cord process painful and nonpainful signals. That increases your overall sensitivity to pain.
Symptoms often start after a triggering event. Triggers can include injuries, surgery, infections or emotional stress. Or the symptoms can build up over time, with no single event to trigger them.
Women are more likely to get fibromyalgia than are men. Many people who have fibromyalgia also have:
There's no cure for fibromyalgia. But medicines and other treatments can help control the symptoms. Exercise, talk therapy and techniques that lower stress also may help.
The main symptoms of fibromyalgia include:
Fibromyalgia often happens with other conditions, such as:
With fibromyalgia, many researchers think nerves are affected in a way that causes the brain and spinal cord to change. This change involves an irregular rise in levels of certain chemicals in the brain that signal pain.
In addition, the brain's pain receptors seem to develop a sort of memory of the pain. They can start to overreact to painful and nonpainful signals.
Many factors likely lead to these changes, including:
Risk factors for fibromyalgia include:
The pain, fatigue, and poor sleep linked with fibromyalgia can affect your personal life and career. It also can be stressful to live with a condition that's often misunderstood by others. That can lead to mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety.
To find out if you have fibromyalgia, your healthcare professional starts by asking you about your symptoms and health history. You also get a physical exam. Your care team checks for the main sign of fibromyalgia: widespread pain throughout the body for at least three months.
You must have pain in at least four of these five areas:
You might need blood tests or imaging tests. These tests can help find out if a condition other than fibromyalgia is the cause of your symptoms.
Other conditions that can cause ongoing pain and tiredness include:
You also may need tests to find conditions that can happen along with fibromyalgia. For example, your doctor may recommend an overnight sleep study if sleep apnea is suspected.
In general, treatments for fibromyalgia include both medicine and other techniques. The goal is to lessen your symptoms and improve your overall health. No one treatment works for all symptoms, so it can help to try a few.
Medicines can help ease the pain of fibromyalgia and improve sleep. Common choices include:
Other treatments can help reduce the effect that fibromyalgia has on your body and your life. Examples include:
Self-care is key as you take charge of fibromyalgia.
Complementary and alternative treatments to help manage pain and stress aren't new. Some, such as meditation and yoga, have been practiced for thousands of years. Their use has become more popular, especially with people who have chronic illnesses such as fibromyalgia.
Some of these treatments do appear to safely relieve stress and reduce pain. Talk with a member of your healthcare team before you try a new complementary or alternative treatment.
Many symptoms of fibromyalgia are similar to those of various other conditions. So you may see more than one doctor before you learn that you have fibromyalgia. Your healthcare team may refer you to a doctor who treats arthritis and other similar conditions, called a rheumatologist.
Before your appointment, you may want to write a list that includes:
Your healthcare professional gives you a physical exam and asks you questions. For example, you may be asked if you have problems sleeping and if you've been feeling depressed or anxious.
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