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eRAM

encyclopedia of Rare Disease Annotation for Precision Medicine




Disease fibromyalgia
Comorbidity C0016053|myofascial pain syndrome
Sentences 14
PubMedID- 25035608 Hence, a total of eight physiotherapists with cervical myofascial pain syndrome participated in this study.
PubMedID- 24748949 Reports on nerve entrapment and myofascial pain syndrome may be attempting to explain the same phenomenon from two different points of view; in the clinical setting, they seem intimately connected and indistinguishable.
PubMedID- 24719150 Duration from onset to surgery and duration of myofascial pain syndrome in the good responder group were significantly shorter than in the bad responder group (p<0.05).
PubMedID- 22506152 Musculoskeletal symptoms have features (e.g., chronic courses) similar to those of chronic degenerative diseases.3 myofascial pain syndrome, a musculoskeletal disease, causes continuous pain in the musculoskeletal system and is common among normal office workers who spend large amounts of time performing vdt related tasks.
PubMedID- 25662558 myofascial pain syndrome (mps) is a complex disorder of the musculoskeletal system with multi factorial involvement and diverse clinical presentations in several areas of the body, one of them being in the orofacial region with involvement of the temporo-mandibular joint (tmj) and masticatory muscles (1).
PubMedID- 22146426 58 yr old woman with myofascial pain syndrome, paresthesia and the paralysis in the right arm and leg after radiofrequency thermoablation was initially treated with usn tt6 followed by table nine on day 3,4 and 5 [49].
PubMedID- PMC4033958 Looked at myofascial pain syndrome in the upper trapezius treatment in 153 patients randomized to either a diclofenac patch or a control (menthol) patch for 8 days.
PubMedID- 25821479 All subjects were evaluated towards myofascial pain syndrome coexistence based on travell and simons diagnostic criteria, namely, (1) taut band palpable (if muscle accessible), (2) exquisite spot tenderness of a nodule in the taut band, (3) patient's recognition of current pain complaint by pressure on the tender nodule (identifies an active trigger point), and (4) painful limit to full stretch range of motion [1].
PubMedID- 24679336 myofascial pain syndrome two additional medium quality systematic reviews assessing the effectiveness of manual therapy in myofascial pain syndrome were identified[178,179].
PubMedID- 21542893 A recent study of 68 fibromyalgia patients with myofascial pain syndromes and 56 fibromyalgia patients with regional joint pain showed that peripheral trigger point injections and hydroelectrophoresis ameliorate fibromyalgia pain and increase pain thresholds at sites distant from the therapeutic interventions [15], providing further evidence that painful peripheral stimuli contribute to the perpetuation of central augmentation.
PubMedID- 20149248 myofascial pain syndrome is a chronic muscular pain disorder in one muscle or groups of muscles accompanied by local and referred pain, decreased range of motion, weakness, and often autonomic phenomena.
PubMedID- 25971282 Two of the more popular conceptual models of myofascial pain syndrome described in the literature are the mtrp and radiculopathy models.1411 active mtrps can spontaneously trigger pain in the local area, or produce referred pain or paraesthesia at distant sites.1 additional symptoms of mtrps include muscle weakness, limited range of motion and autonomic dysfunction.
PubMedID- 22966989 myofascial pain syndrome (mps) is defined by the occurrence of regional pain and stiffness, limited range of motion in the affected muscle, satellite trigger points and twitch response to palpation of taut bands in the muscles[15,16].
PubMedID- 26552835 Often used to characterize the myofascial pain syndrome, trigger points (trp, also called myofascial trigger points) are defined as the tender (hyperirritable) spot in a palpable taut band of skeletal muscle fibers36.

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