Blueskytoo
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
White, out of 'retirement' to poke people with FM and CFS until they say it hurts. Not surprised.
I'm not even sure about this idea that people with ME/CFS have lower pain thresholds, let alone the CSS interpretation overlaid on that idea. From memory, the experimental results, even when done by researchers wanting the lower pain threshold idea to be true, have been inconsistent. Certainly I don't think I am unusually sensitive to pain.
Seriously? Would someone really complain that something 22.6°C was causing pain due to it being cold? Or would something 38°C (which is, after all, similar to body temperature) cause someone to report pain due to it being hot? I'd be surprised if this was a reproducible result. If it's true, it certainly deserves a better response than a waving away with some vague theory.
I haven't read the paper.
I actually DO have a lower threshold to pain, or at least an odd reaction to it. I do have a fibromyalgia diagnosis as well as an ME one, but it was one of the first things I noticed was wrong (apart from being exhausted, of course). I had a routine blood pressure test and the pressure of the cuff on my arm brought me to literal tears of pain - previously this was just uncomfortable, as you’d expect, but it’s now agonising and takes me a few days to recover from the after effects. If I stub my toe or bang my elbow into a door frame, for example, (both things which happen way more than they should due to my weird balance issues), I am crippled with pain that leaves me crying and breathless for a good ten to fifteen minutes and I’m left with an echo of the pain for a good half hour or so after that, much longer and much more severe than I would ever have had before. Normally a stubbed toe or bashed elbow makes you hop about and swear a bit, but not to the point of actual tears of agony and prolonged pain afterwards. I don’t bruise easily but even so, these injuries don’t often result in a bruise so they’re clearly not that bad, I just *feel* like they are.
Pain is more acute and lasts longer these days - I have to reassure the poor nurse at the blood pressure clinic who takes my BP that she can safely ignore my reaction as it’s purely how my body reacts to pain. I’ve also found that pain is, for me anyway, a major physical stressor as far as ME goes - poorly controlled pain from my arthritic hips, for example, will bring me out in a hot sweat and pushes me into PEM, and as a severe sufferer this is something that I cannot afford too often.
Of course, this is purely n-1 anecdata, so take it with the grain of salt it probably deserves.