Treatment of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Fibromyalgia With D-ribose- a Multicenter Study
FibromyalgiaChronic Fatigue SyndromeTo determine whether adding Ribose 5 grams 3 x day would improve quality of life, energy, sleep and cognitive function and decrease pain in patients with CFS and/or fibromyalgia (CFS/FMS).
Peer Mentorship: An Intervention To Promote Effective Pain Self-Management In Adolescents
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)Functional Abdominal Pain6 moreThis protocol matches child subjects with peer mentors of similar age who have learned to function successfully with a chronic pain disorder. The trained mentors will present information to the subjects in a supervised and monitored interaction via telephone and computer for 2 months and encourage participation in skill-building programs. Children will be tested for improvement in pain and functioning at 2 months and again at 4 months to see if improvements persist. The investigators hypothesize that children who received peer mentor support will show more improvement in pain and functioning at 2 and 4 months into treatment than those in a control group who do not receive mentor support.
Evaluation of the Antinociceptive and Analgesic Effects of Milnacipran
Fibromyalgia SyndromeEvaluation of the antinociceptive effect of 7 weeks of treatment with milnacipran, compared to placebo, in fibromyalgia out-patients
A Study To Assess Esreboxetine's Effect On Concentration, Memory, Decision Making And Problem Solving...
FibromyalgiaThe study is designed to assess if esreboxetine can improve the cognitive function of patients with fibromyalgia. Cognitive function is defined as the ability to concentrate, remember things and make decisions or problem solve. The study is also designed to assess if there is a difference in cognitive function between fibromyalgia patients and matched control subjects.
Study of Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase Activity, Serum Levels of Cytokines, BDNF, BH4 and Mirtazapine...
Fibromyalgia SyndromeThis study aims to investigate the anti-nociceptive biogenic amine (serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT], norepinephrine [NE], dopamine [DA], and their metabolites) status, and serum levels of cytokines, BDNF and BH4 in Thai fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) patients compared with a representative Thai population. The efficacy and the tolerability of mirtazapine as monotherapy for FMS will also be assessed. In addition, proof of concept of the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) activity in FMS will be conducted. The study will be divided into three parts. In part I, FMS patients of Thai ethnicity will be examined to determine the blood and/or urinary level of anti-nociceptive biogenic amines, cytokines, BDNF and BH4 by comparison with the demographically matched, but unrelated, healthy normal controls (HNC). In part II, the FMS subjects from part I study will be randomized to blinded therapy with mirtazapine or identical appearing placebo. There will be three treatment groups (N=1:1:1) to accommodate two dosages of mirtazapine (15 mg, 30mg) and placebo given before bedtime. Pill counts at baseline and at follow-up visits will document compliance. Standard outcome instruments (translated and validated in Thai language) will be used at baseline and at each of the follow-up visits. The co-primary outcome variable will be the changes in the pain visual analog scale (PVAS) score and pain responders (>= 30% PVAS reduction). Secondary clinical outcome variables of interest will include depression, insomnia, anxiety, physical function, morning stiffness, patient global assessment of disease status, patient global impression of change, fibromyalgia impact questionnaire (FIQ, quality of life and adverse experience. The changes of biogenic amine and IGF-1 concentrations in blood and/or urine with the treatment will be examined as the secondary biochemical measures. In part III, the IDO activity of depressed FMS, non-depressed FMS and HNC will be compared. Moreover, the effect of mirtazapine treatment on the IDO activity in depressed and non-depressed FMS patients will be assessed. Study hypothesis Anti-nociceptive biogenic amine levels in Thai FMS patients are lower than in Thai healthy normal control. Higher IDO activity could be observed in FMS patients. Higher cytokines could be observed in FMS patients. Higher BDNF could be observed in FMS patients. Lower BH4 could be observed in FMS patients. Mirtazapine is effective in FMS treatment.
An Efficacy Study of Combination of Tramadol and Acetaminophen Tablets in the Treatment of Participants...
PainFibromyalgiaThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the analgesic effect of combination of tramadol hydrochloride and acetaminophen in participants for treatment of fibromyalgia pain (chronic widespread pain and presence of tender points).
An Eight Week, Double-Blind Efficacy Study of Armodafinil Augmentation to Alleviate Fibromyalgia...
FibromyalgiaPrimaryArmodafinil (NuvigilTM) is an isomer of a drug currently approved by the FDA for the treatment of fatigue secondary to narcolepsy, sleep apnea, and shift work sleep disorder called modafinil (ProvigilTM). There is considerable off label evidence for modafinil's ability to reduce fatigue related to multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, cancer related fatigue, and depression related fatigue. There are preclinical studies showing that modafinil can alleviate fatigue secondary to medication side effects (diazepam, chlorpromazine). This multi-layered evidence base suggests that modafinil may be able to alleviate fatigue regardless of medical illness. Armodafinil now has four completed Phase III FDA regulatory studies revealing that it is well tolerated and effective for fatigue associated with obstructive sleep apnea (Effects of Armodafinil in the Treatment of Residual Excessive Sleepiness Associated with Obstructive Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome: A 12-Week, Multicenter, Double-Blind, Randomized,Placebo-Controlled Study in nCPAP-Adherent Adults. Thomas Roth et al. Clinical Therapeutics/Volume 28, Number 5, 2006), shift work sleep disorder, and narcolepsy. Armodafinil is not yet FDA approved. It is felt to be a cleaner, safer, more potent isomer. Theoretically, fatigue is interpreted and possibly dictated centrally and armodafinil's proposed mechanism (similar to that of modafinil) of elevating central histamine activity may allow the brain to interpret a lower fatigue state, thus allowing patients to function better during the day with less peripheral fatigue. Fibromyalgia (FM) is an illness that may involve medical, rheumatological, autoimmune, sleep, endocrine and psychiatric pathology. It is a syndrome of recurrent pain at trigger points. Greater than 90% of these patients will report fatigue as a key symptom as well. There are several investigation lines into the treatment of FM induced pain. Exercise, behavioral therapy, amitryptiline, duloxetine, tramadol, sodium oxybate all have randomized trials and almost all focus on pain. There are very few studies, if any, that look at FM induced fatigue which certainly ads to FM patients' daily incapacity and lowered productivity/quality of life. Armodafinil is a drug with minimal adverse effects (headache, insomnia, GI distress, anxiety, dry mouth, dizziness and an assumed low level addiction which is comparable to modafinil) which is well tolerated in current regulatory studies. It may have a safer tolerability profile than the FM medications noted above. As modafinil is often studied and often added as an augmentation agent to patients' regimens who suffer from fatigue in other medical illnesses, the authors feel that armodafinil would also be effective in this population. The authors wish to conduct a study to determine if armodafinil is safe and tolerable in the treatment of FM induced fatigue. This initial controlled study may allow for continued regulatory studies with this product in FM subjects. We propose a double-blind placebo controlled study to determine if armodafinil is safe and effective in reversing FM induced fatigue.
A Long-Term Study To Evaluate Safety And Efficacy Of Pregabalin In Patients With Fibromyalgia
FibromyalgiaThis study will assess the safety and efficacy of the long-term use of pregabalin at doses up to 450 mg/day in patients with fibromyalgia who have completed 16 weeks of dosing in Study A0081208 (NCT00830167).
Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study Of Pregabalin In Patients With Fibromyalgia
FibromyalgiaThis study, will compare pregabalin with placebo for the duration of 15 weeks to evaluate the efficacy and safety of pregabalin in patients with fibromyalgia.
Yoga for Fibromyalgia
FibromyalgiaFibromyalgia is a common, costly and debilitating illness which affects mostly women. Fibromyalgia patients report widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, stiffness, and distress. Several consensus statements indicate that optimal care combines medication, exercise, and psychology. Yoga is a popular mind/body discipline which holds promise for reducing fibromyalgia symptoms. The aim of this pilot study is to evaluate the effects of an innovative program, Yoga of Awareness, in which yoga poses are complemented by meditation and breathing exercises, presentations on healthy coping, and group discussions. Fifty-six women with fibromyalgia will be recruited and randomly divided into two groups. One group will receive the yoga program right away, and the other group will wait 3 months before receiving the program. Information about fibromyalgia symptoms and functioning will be collected from both groups before and immediately after the first group receives the yoga program. When results from the 2 groups are compared, the investigators expect patients who received the yoga program will have greater gains in fibromyalgia symptoms, physical function and pain coping capacities then those waiting to receive the program. If this study shows the yoga program is effective, the investigators will use this data in 2010 to apply to the National Institutes of Health for a more complete study of its benefits.