Neurosensory disorder characterised by chronic MSK pain
Aetiology
- Higher prevalence in women (6:1)
- Commonest cause of MSK pain in women 22-50
- May begin after emotional or physical trauma
- May occur as a primary condition but is also seen in approximately 25% of patients with RA and approximately 50% of patients with SLE
Pathophysiology
- It is thought to be a disorder of central pain processing or a syndrome of central sensitivity
- Patients tend to have a lower threshold of pain and of other stimuli, such as heat, noise, and strong odours
- Not associated with inflammation

Clinical presentation
- Persistent (≥ 3 months) widespread pain
- Pain/tenderness on both sides of the body, above and below the waist, and includes the axial spine
- Fatigue - disrupted and unrefreshing sleep
- Headaches
- Cognitive and memory impairment
- Anxiety, depression
- Non-cardiac chest pain

Investigations
Clinical diagnosis:
- Patient experiences widespread pain and associated symptoms (unrefreshed sleep, cognitive symptoms, fatigue etc.)
- Symptoms have been present at the same level for ≳3 months
- No other condition otherwise explains the pain (diagnosis of exclusion - rule out other causes)
Management
- Patient education
- Graded exercise programme
- CBT
- Complementary medicine e.g. acupuncture
- Anti-depressants e.g. tricyclics, SSRIs
- Analgesia - atypical analgesia including tricyclics (e.g. amitriptyline), gabapentin and pregabalin may be beneficial