Objective - To determine whether fibromyalgia (FM) is more common in patients with primary Sjogren's syndrome (pSS) who complain of fatigue. The association and prevalence of fatigue and FM was recorded in a group of patients with pSS and a control group of lupus patients, a subset of whom had secondary Sjogren's syndrome (sSS). Methods - 74 patients with pSS and 216 patients with lupus were assessed with a questionnaire to identify the presence of fatigue and generalised pain. From the lupus group, in a subset of 117 lupus patients (from the Bloomsbury unit) those with sSS were identified. All patients were studied for the presence of FM. Results - 50 of 74 patients with pSS (68%) reported fatigue - a prevalence significantly higher than in the lupus group (108/ 216 (50%); p 0.0087). Fatigue was present in 7/13 (54%) patients with SLE/sSS. FM was present in 9/74 patients with pSS (12%), compared with 11/216 lupus patients (5%), and in none of the patients with SLE/sSS. None of these values corresponds with previously reported figures of the incidence of FM in pSS. Conclusion - The results show that fatigue in patients with pSS and sSS is not due to the coexistence of FM in most cases. A lower incidence in the United Kingdom of FM in patients with pSS was found than has been previously reported.
CITATION STYLE
Giles, I., & Isenberg, D. (2000). Fatigue in primary Sjogren’s syndrome: Is there a link with the fibromyalgia syndrome? Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 59(11), 875–878. https://doi.org/10.1136/ard.59.11.875
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