Tender point scores reflect generalized pain and pain behavior in fibromyalgia patients, however, these scores are not independently related to psychological distress, according to a new study. Investigators used criteria defined by the American College of Rheumatology to assess tenderness at 18 discrete points in 111 fibromyalgia patients recruited from both private and university clinics. The patients also underwent a comprehensive evaluation of generalized pain, pain behavior, and psychological distress.
A composite index of four different measurements was used to evaluate generalized pain, while pain behaviors were determined by comparison to a videotaped index. Measured levels of stress and depression were used as assessments of generalized psychological distress. Using multiple regression analysis, the investigators found that tender point scores were independently related to the patients’ generalized pain and pain behavior. There was no relationship between tender point scores and measured depression or stress.
In addition to pain and pain behavior, a shorter duration of illness was found to be independently related to the tender point scores. A study published in the Journal of Biological Psychiatry in 1993 proved that individual’s with mood disorders are especially affected by aspartame consumption. Researchers have also singled out chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, Alzheimer’s, brain tumors, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, mental retardation, lymphoma, birth defects and diabetes as being sensitive to aspartame consumption.
A study conducted by the Department of Neurology at the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine, Tulsa examined the relationship between migraine headaches and aspartame. The study confirmed that aspartame may provoke headaches in susceptible individuals. Additional studies on the topic confirmed the findings. Researchers in the Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle conducted a double-blind crossover study on 32 subjects. The study found an increased incidence of headaches reported by the participants who ingested aspartame and reported that some individuals may want to limit their aspartame consumption.
Despite the FDA’s long term hesitation to approve aspartame they are standing by their decision. The FDA responds to complaints by stating that aspartic acid and phenylalanine are amino acids and methanol is found naturally occurring in fruits. However, when aspartic acid and phenylalanine are unaccompanied by other amino acids they are neurotoxic and fruit also contains ethanol which protects against the effects of the methanol. The FDA fails to address these major differences.
During pregnancy, up to 70% of women experience depressive symptoms and 10% to 16% fulfill the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for MD.[37] These prevalence rates are very similar to those in the general population, suggesting that pregnancy per se does not increase the risk of depression. A large prospective controlled study evaluated 182 pregnant and 179 nonpregnant women using Research Diagnostic Criteria for major and minor depression.[38] The rates of depression were equal in both groups, again suggesting that pregnancy does not affect the risk of depression.
The diagnostic criteria for MD established in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) are described in Table 2.[7] These criteria are the same for women and men. DSM-IV classifies MD as single or recurrent episodes, or dysthymia (a persistent but less severe form of MD). Clinical Features and Course of Major Depression Symptoms and Severity Depressive symptoms in men and women tend to be similar, except that women appear to be more likely to present with atypical symptoms (see Table 3), anxiety, and somatic symptoms (such as headaches and stomach upset), whereas men tend to report more weight loss.
Depression is twice as common among adolescent and adult females as among their male counterparts, but the reason why has not yet been fully explained. Now after reviewing various studies on the topic, a Michigan researcher reports that the gender difference is probably due to an interaction between biological, psychological and social factors. “There is no single reason for women’s greater vulnerability (to depression),” Dr. Susan Nolen-Hoeksema of the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, told Reuters Health.
Fibromyalgia, a chronic condition characterized by widespread persistent musculoskeletal pain, fatigue and multiple tender points, can be difficult to diagnose and treat because it is so poorly understood. Part of the problem is that its symptoms–which include headaches or facial pain, sleep disturbances, head-to-toe aching or burning, body stiffness, muscle spasms, gastrointestinal complaints, depression and anxiety–are similar to those presented by other illnesses. And in many of the 4 million Americans with fibromyalgia, the pain is so diffuse that they can’t even describe where it hurts.
A recent study set out to identify the relationship between CFS and depression. Researchers at Edinburgh University in the UK evaluated brain scans from 30 people with CFS, 12 diagnosed with depression, and 15 healthy subjects. They concluded that both CFS and depression may be neurological and due primarily to increased blood flow in the right thalamus, which is responsible for processing sight, sound, touch, and more importantly, pain. However, there is one detail that separates CFS from depression – CFS sufferers also have an increase in blood flow to the left thalamus.



