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Research Paper

Examination of contraction-induced muscle pain as a behavioral correlate of physical activity in women with and without fibromyalgia

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Pages 1864-1869 | Received 02 Jul 2014, Accepted 03 Nov 2014, Published online: 20 Nov 2014
 

Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to compare muscle pain intensity during a sustained isometric contraction in women with and without fibromyalgia (FM), and examine the association between muscle pain and self-reported levels of physical activity. Methods: Fourteen women with FM and 14 healthy women completed the study, where muscle pain ratings (MPRs) were obtained every 30 s during a 3 min isometric handgrip task at 25% maximal strength, and self-reported physical activity was quantified using the Baecke Physical Activity Questionnaire. Results: Women with FM were less physically active than healthy controls. During the isometric contraction, MPR progressively increased in both groups at a comparable rate, but women with FM generally reported a greater intensity of muscle pain than healthy controls. Among all women, average MPR scores were inversely associated with self-reported physical activity levels. Conclusions: Women with FM exhibit augmented muscle pain during isometric contractions and reduced physical activity than healthy controls. Furthermore, contraction-induced muscle pain is inversely associated with physical activity levels. These observations suggest that augmented muscle pain may serve as a behavioral correlate of reduced physical activity in women with FM.

    Implications for Rehabilitation

  • Women with fibromyalgia experience a greater intensity of localized muscle pain in a contracting muscle compared to healthy women.

  • The intensity of pain during muscle contraction is inversely associated with the amount of physical activity in women with and without fibromyalgia.

  • Future studies should determine whether exercise adherence can be improved by considering the relationship between contraction-induced muscle pain and participation in routine physical activity.

Acknowledgements

We thank Carly Nagel, Michaela Nofsinger and Kelly Santo for their assistance in data collection and processing.

Declaration of interest

This work was supported by a John J. Bonica Fellowship from the International Association for the Study of Pain to MU and a Career Development Award from the Colorado Clinical and Translational Institute (NIHKL2RR025779) to KSM. There is no conflict of interest among the authors.

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