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Fibromyalgia symptoms
The initial fibromyalgia symptoms include widespread musculo-skeletal pain, severe fatigue and disturbed sleep. Fibromyalgia means a pain in the ligaments, muscles, and tendons which are the soft fibrous tissues in the body. Usually patients with fibromyalgia say that their body aches all over. Their muscles can feel like these patients were pulled or overworked. Sometimes fibromyalgia symptoms can include muscle twitches and burning sensations. Women in particular than men are afflicted with fibromyalgia and it emerges in people of all age groups. A conservative number of its prevalence is 2% of the regular population, but it can be as high as 3 to 5% too.
Common fibromyalgia symptoms and chronic fatigue syndrome:
The pain as fibromyalgia symptoms has no boundaries. People explain the pain as deep muscular aching, throbbing, stabbing and shooting. Intense burning can also occur. Quite often, the pain and stiffness are intensified in the morning and you can hurt more in muscle groups which are used repetitively. Fatigue as fibromyalgia symptoms in patients and yet incapacitating in others. The fatigue has been described as "brain fatigue" in which patients feel totally drained of energy. A number of patients depict this situation by calling that they feel as though their arms and legs are tied to concrete weight and they have trouble concentrating, e.g., brain fog. Other fibromyalgia symptoms are Sleep disorder. Most fibromyalgia patients have an associated sleep disorder known as the alpha-EEG anomaly. This disorder was uncovered in a sleep lab with the help of a machine which recorded the brain waves of patients during sleep. Researchers discovered that the majority of fibromyalgia patients can fall asleep without much trouble, but their deep stage (or stage 4) sleep was constantly interrupted by bursts of awake-like that of brain activity. Patients seemed to spend the night with one foot in sleep and the other one away. Sleep tests are not necessary to determine if you have disturbed sleep.

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