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Feb. 5, 2010
Objective
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FM) is an idiopathic chronic pain syndrome characterised by
widespread nonarticular musculoskeletal pain, generalised tender points, in the absence of
inflammatory or structural musculoskeletal abnormalities, accompanied by a constellation
of symptoms that include fatigue and disturbances of sleep and mood.
Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) is the major catecholamine-clearing pathway and
involved in the mediation of pain perception in humans, and the hypothesized role of pain
perception in FM. The association between Val/Met polymorphism at the COMT gene was
evaluated in FM disorder.
Methods
209 FM female patients were compared with 152 of their non-affected relatives. DNA was
obtained from all family members and extracted. We used the logistic based variant of the
transmission disequilibrium test to assess association (and linkage) without confounding
effect of population stratification.
Results
We observed an association between FM and the COMT val158met polymorphism in a dose
response effect of the COMT genotype and the number of pressure points reported. We also
observed that non-affected relatives of FM patients had a reduced percentage of the COMT
met allele.
Conclusion
Our results are consistent with carriers of the COMT met/met genotype showing increased
sensitivity to pain as one mechanism for the role of this gene in conferring risk for FM.
We suggest that the reduced frequency of the met allele in the non-affected relatives acts
as a 'protective' allele in this group and prevents the development of clinical FM.
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