Cognition is the ability to think,
perceive, know and understand the world. The term cognition is taken
from the Latin word “cognoscere” that means to know. In psychology the
cognition refers to mental functions, mental processes and states of
intelligent entities.
The particular focus is on comprehension,
inferencing, decision- making, planning and learning. The term
cognition is broadly the act of knowing that ends up in thought and
action.
Introduction of Fibromyalgia:
Fibromyalgia is a
chronic syndrome characterized by tiredness , pain in muscles, bones,
joints and tender points.( Tender points are places in the neck,
shoulders, back, hips , arms and legs that hurt when touched)[2,3].
Fibromyalgia is taken from the Latin words (fibra+ myo+ algos).Fibra
means fibre or fibrous tissues, myo means muscles and algos means pain.
The term was coined in 1976.[4]It more affects females than males with
a ration of 9:1. by ACR (American College of Rheumatology) criteria
[5].Fibromyalgia can occur in 3 to 6% of population. The age of onset
is between 20 and 50, though it may occur in childhood as well.
Symptoms:
The
major symptoms of fibromyalgia are widespread pain, tenderness to light
touch, moderate to severe fatigue, heightened sensitivity to skin,
tingling sensation achiness in the muscle tissues, prolonged muscle
spasms, weakness in the limbs, and nerve pain and also chronic sleep
disturbances. Other symptoms include headaches and facial pains,
depression, anxiety, mood changes, dizziness and difficulty
concentrating etc.In addition to above symtoms the patients may
experience cognitive dysfunctions as well.
Causes:
The
causes of this disease are unknown. There are several theories which
state the causes of pain. One such theory is “central sensitization”
which states that the people with fibromyalgia have lower threshold of
pain because of the increased sensitivity that causes pain. Other
theories state that the sleep disturbances, injuries, infections
abnormalities of autonomic nervous systems( sympathetic nervous system
dysfunction) and changes in muscle metabolism (reduced blood flow to
muscles) etc can cause fibromyalgia. Also , psychological stress. and
hormonal changes may cause fibromyalgia.The increased psychosocial
stress, excessive physical exertion, and lack of slow- wave sleep and
changes in humidity and barometric pressure may exacerbate the symptoms.
Risk factors:
The
risk factors include the female sex , early and middle adulthood,
disturbed sleep patterns, family history and rheumatic disease.
Diagnosis:
Strictly
speaking there are no diagnostic criteria for this disease. But there
is a widely accepted criteria for research purposes elaborated in 1990
by the American Centre of Rheumatology , popularly known as AMR
criteria. [4].This is as follows:
1. A history of widespread
pain lasting more than three months affecting four quadrants of the
body i.e both sides and above and below the waist.
2. There are 18 tendor points out of which the patient may feel pain in 11 or more tender points.
Treatments:
The
drug treatment include analgesics, antidpressants, anti-seizure drug
and muscle relaxants. The non drug treatment includes physical
exercises, massage treatment , stress management, cognitive behavior
therapy and neurofeedback or biofeedback. Holistic treatment include
management of sleep, diet, stress, pain , managing blood sugar levels
and avoiding known triggers etc.
Fibromyalgia and Cognition:
The patient may experience cognitive dysfunction ( known as “brain fog”
or “fibro fog”) which may be characterized by impaired concentration,
unclear thinking and short-term memory consolidation, impaired speed of
performance, inability to multi-task, and cognitive overload.Fibro fog
is the term descibed by Stuart Donaldson as "decreased ability to
concentrate, decreased immediate recall, and an inability to
multi-task". Other symptoms include confusion and forget fullness,
inability to recall simple words and transposing words and numbers.
Sometimes cognitive functions are so impaired that they get lost in
familiar places and they have difficulty in communication. Sometimes
they lose their jobs or pediatric patients drop out of school . Also ,
there is difficulty in finding the right word for the conversation and
they have trouble retaining new information.
Causes Of Cognitive Dysfunction In Fibromyalgia:
The
patients with were studied on CT(SPECT) to visualize their brain. It
was found that there was decreased blood flow in the right and left
caudate nuclei and thalami.
Abnormal levels of neurotransmitters
such as substance P, serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine, and
epinephrine may be cause cognitive dysfunction. Neuroendocrine
imbalance of the HPA axis may play a role in fibro-fog.
The
distracting quality of pain may be another possible cause of the
cognitive dysfunction. Cognitive performance of patients with
fibromyalgia is correlated with their reported level of pain.
Researchers
are looking at tissue volumes in areas of the brain (hippocampus) that
may be damaged by the effects of stress hormones.
The results of a
study by Elvin et al (2006) support the suggestion that muscle ischemia
can contribute to pain in FM, possibly by maintaining the central
nervous changes such as central sensitisation/disinhibition.[
Others
studies have implicated yeast overload, water retention, and glial-cell
abnormalities as causes of cognitive dysfunction in fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia, Sleep And Cognition:
Cote
and Moldofsky (1997) studied 10 female patients with fibromyalgia and a
matched non compalinative comparison group. They spent two nights in
the sleep laboratory. The subjects completed self assessment of a
computerized battery and performance tests at hourly intervals from
7.0h to 20h. The results indicated that fibromyalgia patients spent
more time on stage 1 sleep. They reported greater sleepiness, more
fatigue, more pain, more negative mood, and lower accuracy on
performance tasks across a 14 h day. The Fibromyalgia group was slower
in speed, but not impaired in accuracy, on performance of complex
tasks, i.e., grammatical reasoning, serial addition/subtraction, and a
simulated multi-task office procedure.
Fibromyalgia ,Cognitive aging and Cognition:
Park
et al (2001) studied three groups of patients- fibromyalgia patients
with concomitant depression and in the absence of medications and age
and education matched controls and education matched older controls
(individually matched to be 20 years older than the fibromyalgia
patients). They found that older controls performed more poorly than
the younger controls on speed of processing, working memory, free
recall, and verbal fluency. Fibromylgia patients performed more poorly
on all the measures than the age matched controls , except for
information processing measures. Fibromyalgia patients performed like
the older ones , though they had better speed of processing and poorer
vocabulary. Fibromyalgia patient’s cognitive performance has been
correlated with the pain,but not with anxiety and depression.
Fibromyalgia and Attention:
Dick
et al (2002) compared the fibromyalgia patients with therheumatoid
arthritis and musculoskeletal pain patients and normal controls. They
found that all 3 groups of chronic pain patients, regardless of
diagnosis, had impaired cognitive functioning on an ecologically
sensitive neuropsychological test of everyday attention
Fibromyalgia and Memory:
Glass
(2006) found that the fibromyalgia patients have memory complaints.
Objective cognitive testing demonstrates long-term and working memory
impairments.[14] Park et al (2001) found that fibromyalgia patients
reported more memory complaints as compared to older or younger
controls. Also , these complaints were correlated with poor cognitive
performance[13]. In a study by Suhr (2003) it was found that the
fibromyalgia patients reported more memory complaints and more
depression, pain and fatigue than the other groups(chronic pain group
and healthy control group). But , when controlled for pain, fatigue and
depression, no difference was found between the groups.In a study by
Katz et al (2004) it was found that memory decline and mental confusion
were coupled more often in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome
(50.9-8.8%).[27] Sephton et al(2003) examined relative influences of
neuroendocrine function and psychological factors on declarative memory
among 50 women with fibromyalgia. Neuroendocrine function and
depression had significant independent associations with memory
function. These findings suggest that a basic disorder of endocrine
stress responses may contribute to the cognitive symptoms experienced
by fibromyalgia patients.[28].Glass et al(2005) studied twenty-three
Fibromyalgia patients, 23 age- and education-matched controls, and 22
older controls completed the Metamemory in Adulthood (MIA)
questionnaire, which assessed beliefs about seven aspects of memory
function. Group differences on the seven scales were assessed, and
scores on the capacity scale were correlated with objective memory
performance. Fibromyalgia patients reported lower memory capacity and
more memory deterioration than did either control group.
Fibromyalgia and information processing :
Glass(2006) found that CFS patients have slow information-processing.
Sletvold
et al (1995) compared 25 patients of fibromyalgia with 22 patients of
major depression and 18 healthy controls. The results indicated that
the fibromyalgia patients showed non specific deficits in information
processing capacity. However , the major depression patients showed a
compromise in right hemisphere which was not found in fibromyalgia
patients.
Eleven patients showed impairment on at least one
task of cognition without stimulus and 30 showed impairment on the
cognition with the stimulus competition. The findings validate the
perception of failing memory in patients with fibromyalgia which is
linked to a source of distraction.
Fibromyalgia and Neuroimaging techniques:
The
neuroimaging studies demonstrate cerebral abnormalities and a pattern
of increased neural recruitment during cognitive tasks.
Fibromyalgia and Receptors:
The
study by Bazzichi et al.(2006) showed that there is an upregulation of
Peripheral benzodiazepine receptors on platelets of fibromyalgic
patients and it seems to be related with the severity of fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia and Cognitive Behavior Therapy:
In
most studies Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)provided the worthwhile
improvements in pain-related behaviour, self efficacy, coping
strategies and overall physical function. Bennett and Nelson (2006)
reviewed results from 13 programs using CBT, alone or in combination
with other treatment. The analysis of the results showed that the CBT
provided improvements in patients with fibromyalgia.
Fibromyalgia and Hypervigilance:
Dohrenbusch
(2001) found that most of the literature review does not show the trait
like feature of hypervigilant information processing in patients with
fibromyalgia.[21]. On the other hand McDermid (1996) et al found that
generalized hypervigilance is present in the patients with
fibromyalgia. They studied 20 fibromyalgia, 20 patients with rheumatoid
arthritis and 20 normal controls. The fibromyalgia patients have lower
threshold and tolerance for pain than the rheumatoid arthritis patients
but rheumatoid arthritis patients have lower thresholds than
normals.Lorenz et al (1998) studied 10 patients with fibromyalgia and
matched normal controls. They found that amplitudes of middle-latency
(N1) and long-latency (P2) laser evoked potentials (LEPs) were
significantly higher in Fibromyalgia syndrome than in controls. And
laser intensity at pain but not at sensation threshold was lower in
Fibromyalgia syndrome than in controls.
Carrillo et al (2006) found
that fibromyalgia patients presented shorter N1 and P2 latencies and a
stronger intensity dependence of their auditory evoked potentials. Both
results suggested that fibromyalgia patients may be hypervigilant to
sensory stimuli, especially when very loud tones are used. The larger
auditory evoked potentials suggested that defects in inhibitory system
which protect against overstimulation is the crucial factor in the
pathophysiology of the fibromyalgia.
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