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Old Remedy/New Help for
Fibromyalgia
Reported August 28, 2006
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (Ivanhoe Broadcast News) --
Fibromyalgia affects one in nine people and leaves its victims in constant
pain. It's difficult to diagnose, and there is no cure. But there is hope.
An ingredient found in a common over-the-counter drug may ease patients'
pain.
Pamela Kennedy sings every day to the little boy she thought she would never
have. "With fibromyalgia, I have had pain for the last 15 years in all my
joints," she says. "We were trying to have children, but I was never able to
conceive."
Pamela adopted little Kenton. She lovingly takes care of him while living
every minute with muscle aches and fatigue. "It's really hard, especially
because he's not walking and he's heavy. I take pain pills all day." The
pills help relieve nerve cells that are highly sensitive.
"These patients with minor activities experience significant pain," Roland
Staud, M.D., a rheumatologist at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
tells Ivanhoe.
A new twist on an old drug may help. Dextromethorphan is an ingredient
commonly found in cough syrup, but doctors found it also targets nerve
cells.
Dr. Staud says, "The activity of these nerve cells is significantly
decreased, resulting in less amplification of pain."
He says, however, the levels found in cough syrup are not strong enough.
They studied a special dose that needs to be taken to feel a difference --
about four to five-times stronger than what you can buy over-the-counter.
"If they could find something where I could be lucid all day, be a good mom,
that would be very good," Pamela says -- very good for Pamela and her son.
At high doses, dextromethorphan causes problems related to memory and
confusion. The drug is still being studied and isn't available to the public
yet.
If you would like more information, please contact:
Mike Garrison
Director of Broadcast News
University of Florida Health Science Center
Gainesville, FL 32611
mgarriso@vpha.health.ufl.edu
http://www.news.health.ufl.edu
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