To investigate the presence of trigger points (TrPs) in feet musculature and topographical pressure sensitivity maps of the feet as well as the relationship between TrPs, pressure pain maps, and clinical variables in women with fibromyalgia (FMS).
Foot pain is
highly prevalent in the women suffering from fibromyalgia syndrome. In this
study, flexor hallucis brevis and adductor hallucis muscles were revealed as
the active trigger points (TrPs) with elevated pressure hypersensitivity in the
plantar region.
To investigate
the presence of trigger points (TrPs) in feet musculature and topographical
pressure sensitivity maps of the feet as well as the relationship between TrPs,
pressure pain maps, and clinical variables in women with fibromyalgia (FMS).
Fifty-one FMS
women and 24 comparable healthy women participated. TrPs within the flexor
hallucis brevis, adductor hallucis, dorsal interossei, extensor digitorum
brevis, and quadratus plantae, as well as external and internal gastrocnemius,
were explored. Pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) were assessed in a blind manner
over seven locations on each foot. Topographical pressure sensitivity maps of
the plantar region were generated using the averaged PPT of each location.
The prevalence
rate of foot pain was 63% (n = 32). The number of active TrPs for each FMS
woman with foot pain was 5 ± 1.5 without any latent TrPs. Women with FMS
without foot pain and healthy controls had only latent TrPs (2.2 ± 0.8 and 1.5
± 1.3, respectively). Active TrPs in the flexor hallucis brevis and adductor
hallucis muscles were the most prevalent. Topographical pressure pain sensitivity
maps revealed that FMS women with foot pain had lower PPT than FMS women
without pain and healthy controls, and higher PPT on the calcaneus bone (P <
0.001).
The presence of
foot pain in women with FMS is high. The referred pain elicited by active TrPs
in the foot muscles reproduced the symptoms in these patients. FMS women
suffering foot pain showed higher pressure hypersensitivity in the plantar
region than those FMS women without pain.
Pain Medicine
Muscle trigger points and pressure pain sensitivity maps of the feet in women with fibromyalgia syndrome
Maria C. Tornero-Caballero et al.
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