Both cervical stenosis and fibromyalgia are debilitating disorders. Until recently, they were often mistaken for each other in the doctor’s office. It is harder to detect cervical stenosis until it has reached a stage where it has caused permanent nerve damage.
Fibromyalgia is getting easier to detect with new test procedures. The important thing to remember is that you need to understand both disorders, as fibromyalgia can radically increase your risk of cervical stenosis.
What is fibromyalgia?
Fibromyalgia is a disorder that is characterized by a cluster of symptoms. It was originally hard to diagnose as all of the symptoms were noted only by patient reporting, however, now there are blood tests and brain scans that can help make a clear diagnosis possible. People who suffer from fibromyalgia most often experience chronic and pervasive pain, pain and stiffness in the neck, spine, hips and joints, sleep disruption, painful menstruation, and brain fog.
It is associated with an increased occurrence of yeast infections, spinal stenosis and other immune related disorders, including IBS. Fibromyalgia is not a terminal disease, but it is considered to be a limited progressive disease. Many people experience a reduction in symptoms when they are of senior age. Both men and women can get fibromyalgia.
Who is at risk?
Men and women can acquire fibromyalgia at any age past 18, although there have been cases of younger children of both sexes being diagnosed with the disease. Science is not clear on the specific cause of fibromyalgia, but they have identified some clear factors that may indicate and increased risk for it.
These risk factors include being related to anyone who has fibromyalgia, severe body or train trauma and injury, immune disorders, arthritis and inflammatory diseases. Fibromyalgia does not raise your risk for cancer. Women with fibromyalgia may be at a higher risk for endometriosis, which then increases their risk for ovarian cancer as well.
What is cervical stenosis?
Cervical stenosis is a narrowing of the spinal canal between vertebrae C1 and C7 in the spine due to compression. This compression affects the spinal cord and nerve endings. It can result in the loss of bladder control, difficulty in keeping balance, numbness or weakness in arms or legs, muscle weakness and loss of muscle control.
It is sometimes referred to as a “bulging disc” issue, where the compression has become so severe the vertebrae of the spine are bulging out for lack of cushion and pressing or cutting into the spinal cord and nerve endings. It is a degenerative disorder that is rarely diagnosed before the appearance of advanced symptoms. Common treatments for it include medication, exercise, physical therapy and sometimes surgery to relieve the compression on the spinal column.
Who is at risk?
Cervical stenosis can start for many reasons in the human body, including high impact repetitive activity, poor posture and body trauma. It is also a common disorder that occurs as a result of the aging process. It occurs more frequently in women over 50, due mostly to a lack of muscle tone and strength. It is also common in men over 50 as well, but typically noticeable later in life than with women.
What is the relationship between cervical stenosis and fibromyalgia?
The relationship between cervical stenosis and fibromyalgia is complicated. Many of the initial symptoms of both can cause them to be mistaken for each other. Fortunately, with the recent development of blood tests and brain scans to diagnose fibromyalgia, combined with the x-ray diagnostics available for cervical stenosis a misdiagnosis is getting to be less common.
However, there is increasing evidence that nerve damage and its possible role in fibromyalgia may be stronger than initially thought. This is leading many physicians to believe that there is a stronger relationship between cervical stenosis and fibromyalgia than ever before.
As cervical stenosis causes nerve damage, but the symptoms may not show until that damage has been occurring for years – that nerve damage may be one of the triggers for fibromyalgia. It is also accepted that the risk for cervical stenosis will be much higher for men and women with fibromyalgia too.
What can you do?
You and your doctor can make sure to monitor your health to spot the symptoms of both disorders and treat them accordingly. If you are not showing signs of cervical stenosis, it is important to remember that a diagnosis of fibromyalgia raises your risk for developing it. Fibromyalgia and its pain and stiffness are most likely to decrease the amount of regular physical activity that you do in your life.
That decrease can set the stage for increased compression in the range of your spine between C1 and C7 that will then lead to spinal stenosis at a much earlier stage in life. By being proactive with lifestyle changes, you can help your fibromyalgia symptoms and prevent cervical stenosis too.
The importance of flexibility and load bearing exercise
The primary non-surgical treatment for cervical stenosis is pain management and exercise. Physical therapy and exercise the focuses on increasing flexibility, along with load bearing and strength building help to relive pressure on the spinal cord.
It is also the lifestyle change that is most recommended to those with fibromyalgia to help relieve symptoms. Building your strength, as well as maintaining your flexibility not only increases your ability to support you upper body and relieve pressure on the spine, it also encourages the lymph system to work more effectively – which helps your immune system.
Making sure to determine if cervical stenosis is present
Cervical stenosis and fibromyalgia are two disorders that are often mistaken for each other, and that can create each other too. The nerve damage from cervical stenosis can lead to the development of fibromyalgia, and the muscle weakness and pain of fibromyalgia can create the environment that results in cervical stenosis. You can be proactive with your life so you don’t have to suffer with both of these.
Further reading:
Fibromyalgia Overview http://www.spine-health.com/conditions/fibromyalgia/fibromyalgia-overview
Cervical Spinal Stenosis http://www.nfra.net/SpinSten.htm
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