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Abstract
To determine whether fibromyalgia (FM) is more common in patients with primary Sjögren'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 Sjögren's syndrome (sSS).
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.
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.
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.