Perceived and endocrine acute and chronic stress indicators in fibromyalgia syndrome

Author:

Beiner Eva,Hermes Michelle,Reichert Julian,Kleinke Kristian,Vock Stephanie,Löffler Annette,Ader Leonie,Sirazitdinov Andrei,Keil Sebastian,Schmidt Tim,Schick Anita,Löffler Martin,Hopp Micheal,Ruckes Christian,Hesser Jürgen,Reininghaus Ulrich,Flor Herta,Eich Wolfgang,Friederich Hans-Christoph,Tesarz Jonas,

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionFibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a chronic disorder characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue and tenderness and closely associated with high levels of stress. FMS is therefore often considered a stress-related disease.MethodsA comparative study was conducted with 99 individuals diagnosed with FMS and a control group of 50 pain-free individuals. Stress indicators were classified into three categories: perceived stress assessed using the Perceived Stress Scale, and daily average salivary cortisol and hair cortisol concentrations as indicators of acute and chronic stress levels related to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Analysis of variance and covariance were used to identify group differences and the influence of covariates age, sex, and body mass index. Correlational analyses further elucidated the relationship between stress indicators and clinical symptoms.ResultsParticipants with FMS reported significantly higher perceived stress levels than controls (p< .001, ηp2= .3), which were positively correlated with symptom burden (r= .64,p< .001). In contrast, there were no significant differences in the endocrinological stress indicators salivary and hair cortisol between the groups (p> .05), nor were these indicators associated with clinical symptoms.ConclusionThe study highlights the central role of perceived stress in FMS, whereas endocrinological indicators did not differentiate FMS from controls. This finding calls for a nuanced approach to clinical assessment and therapeutic interventions tailored to patients with FMS, emphasizing the management of perceived stressors.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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