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The Link between Endogenous Pain Modulation Changes and Clinical Improvement in Fibromyalgia Syndrome: A Meta-Regression Analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and temporal summation (TS) tests assess pain inhibition and pain sensitivity in fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), but their clinical relevance is debated.
  • A study reviewed nine trials involving 484 participants and analyzed the relationship between changes in CPM/TS tests and clinical improvements in FMS after various treatments.
  • Results indicated that while overall changes in TS and CPM were not significant due to conflicting effects from different interventions, non-pharmacological treatments particularly helped normalize CPM/TS levels, suggesting these tests could serve as biomarkers for effective FMS management.

Article Abstract

Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and temporal summation (TS) tests can measure the ability to inhibit pain in fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) patients and its level of pain sensitization, respectively. However, their clinical validity is still unclear. We studied the association between changes in the CPM and TS tests and the clinical improvement of FMS patients who received therapeutic intervention. We systematically searched for FMS randomized clinical trials with data on therapeutic interventions comparing clinical improvement (pain intensity and symptom severity reduction), CPM, and TS changes relative to control interventions. To study the relationship between TS/CPM and clinical measures, we performed a meta-regression analysis to calculate odds ratios. We included nine studies (484 participants). We found no significant changes in TS or CPM by studying all the interventions together. Our findings show that this lack of difference is likely because pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions resulted in contrary effects. Non-pharmacological interventions, such as non-invasive neuromodulation, showed the largest effects normalizing CPM/TS. Meta-regression was significantly associated with pain reduction and symptom severity improvement with normalization of TS and CPM. We demonstrate an association between clinical improvement and TS/CPM normalization in FMS patients. Thus, the TS and CPM tests could be surrogate biomarkers in FMS management. Recovering defective endogenous pain modulation mechanisms by targeted non-pharmacological interventions may help establish long-term clinical recovery in FMS patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11428716PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12092097DOI Listing

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