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Stretching and strengthening exercises in treatment of fibromyalgia patients: a randomized clinical trial

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Author(s):
Ana Assumpção Berssaneti
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Medicina (FM/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Amelia Pasqual Marques; Cristina Maria Nunes Cabral; Silvia Maria Amado João; José Eduardo Martinez; Jamil Natour
Advisor: Amelia Pasqual Marques
Abstract

Background: Exercises have been reported as one of the most effective management of Fibromyalgia (FM), however stretching and strengthening training remain under evaluated. Objectives: To assess and compare the effects of stretching and strengthening exercises on muscle strength, flexibility, pain, symptoms and quality of life of FM patients, comparing to a control group. Methods: The sample was composed by 79 eligible women of whom 16 were excluded, and 63 entered the study and were randomly assign in to one of three groups: flexibility group (FG), strength group (SG) and control (CG). At the end, 14 finished the study on FG, 16 on ST and 14 on CG. All subjects were evaluated before and after 12 weeks according to the following procedures: maximum isometric muscle contraction for knee flexion and extension (MIMC) using the EMG System do Brasil dynamometer, flexibility by finger-to-tip floor test (FTF), pain by visual analogue scale (VAS), pain threshold (PT) and tender points count (TP+) by a Fischer dolorimeter, symptoms by Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) and quality of life by Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36). FG and SG underwent in a stretching and strengthening program, respectively, including exercises for upper and lower body and trunk, twice a week. Data were statistically analyzed by: t-Student test, Wilcoxon test, Anova one-way and Kruskall- Wallis Anova, with significance level of 5%. Main Results: FG had statistically improvements after treatment in: PT, FTF, fatigue, sleep and stiffness of FIQ; functional capacity, vitality, mental health, pain and role physical of SF-36 (p=0,05). SG had statistically improvements after treatment in: PT, TP+, FTF, MIMC of knee flexion, fatigue, sleep, stiffness, anxiety, depression and total score of FIQ and functional capacity, vitality, mental health and role emotional (p=0,05). No significant difference was observed in CG after 12 weeks (p=0,05). Comparing three groups, the FG was statistically better after treatment for functional capacity, pain and role physical of SF-36. The SG was statistically better for depression of FIQ and CG was statistically worse for functional capacity, sleep and stiffness of FIQ and vitality of SF -36. Conclusions: Stretching and strengthening exercise had statistically improvements in pain, symptoms and quality of life of FM patients. Considering the positive effects on different aspects, they could be used as complementary exercises (AU)