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Dry eyes are a very common complaint. In some patients, we can identify the reason for the dryness; however, in others the dryness has no clear cause. Dryness can lead to eye irritation, redness, and sometimes changes in vision. Fibromyalgia is a condition of chronic pain that is poorly understood but seems to have a component of altered sensory processing. People with fibromyalgia tend to complain of dry and irritated eyes at a higher rate than the general population. We plan to evaluate patients with dry eye symptoms for abnormalities in sensory processing and in their autonomic nervous system. We hope to learn about possible relationships between dry eye symptoms and fibromyalgia in order to better understand and treat these conditions.
Full description
Dry eye and fibromyalgia syndromes are most prevalent in women. Therefore, female patients seen in Kellogg Eye Center for ocular complaints of dryness, grittiness, irritation, or related symptoms, without any identifiable cause, will be offered enrollment into the study. These individuals will be compared to both a "positive control" group (fibromyalgia patients) and a healthy control group. We hypothesize that the patients seen with irritative symptoms will have autonomic and sensory processing profiles similar to fibromyalgia patients, and both groups will differ from healthy controls. All study participants will have an extensive ophthalmological exam in addition to autonomic and sensory testing, in order to more fully characterize the underlying mechanism(s) of these symptoms.
Recruitment:
Female patients over the age of 18 with the above mentioned complaints will be told of the study at the time of their visit. They will be given a copy of the study consent form to take home with them or one will be mailed to them. Additionally, from CareWeb billing records, or from other University of Michigan Ophthalmologists, a list of patients who have previously been seen (within the last year) in the Ophthalmology Comprehensive Clinic for dry eyes complaints will be identified and contacted by US mail with a recruitment letter uploaded. If the patient is interested, the letter will list research staff contact information, who patients may then contact. If the patient does not contact research staff by phone or email, research staff may follow-up the letter by phone no earlier than one week after it is mailed. If patients are not interested, a phone number will be listed allowing patients to opt-out of being contacted about the study by phone in the future. Follow-up phone calls will utilize a phone script.
Patients who are interested in participating will be contacted by the study coordinator for further discussion to see if they meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria and to schedule a visit to the Cornea Clinic for an ophthalmic evaluation. At the time of this visit, patients will be asked to sign the consent form and be given a study identification number that will be used exclusively in patient identification in study materials. These patients will then be scheduled to be seen at the Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center at Dominos Farms for the remaining sensory and autonomic testing. All patient study information will be collected and encoded according to HIPAA guidelines and institutional review board approval. The plan is to enroll 50 patients into Group 1 over a 12 month enrollment period.
The study group will be compared to two groups of age matched patients, 25 with known FM (Group 2) and 25 healthy controls (Group 3). These patients will be identified by searching the patient registry that includes more than 400 FM and healthy control patients who have already undergone the standardized sensory and autonomic evaluations at the Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center. The study coordinator will then contact the individuals that are identified in the registry that meet these criteria, and they will be asked if they are interested in enrolling in this particular study (all individuals in the registry have given consent to be contacted for additional studies for which they are eligible). FM patients and controls who agree to participate will be asked to sign the consent form and be scheduled for the ophthalmic evaluation at the Cornea Clinic.
Ophthalmic Evaluation:
Individuals in all three groups will be seen in the Cornea Clinic at the Kellogg Eye Center and will receive a complete ophthalmic evaluation including the following objective measures of ocular and visual sensation:
Sensory and Autonomic Evaluation:
Patients seen in the Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center at Dominos Farms will be evaluated by several modalities for measures of altered sensory processing and autonomic dysfunction:
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Healthy Controls:
Female over the age of 18, No symptoms of dry eyes, Must be able to read text on the computer screen and understand English, and not have a physical impairment that prevents you from completing a paper and pencil questionnaire or using a tablet computer
Fibromyalgia:
Female over the age of 18, No symptoms of dry eyes, Been diagnosed with fibromyalgia, Must be able to read text on the computer screen and understand English, and not have a physical impairment that prevents you from completing a paper and pencil questionnaire or using a tablet computer
Dry Eye:
Female over the age of 18, have symptoms of dry eyes, Must be able to read text on the computer screen and understand English, and not have a physical impairment that prevents you from completing a paper and pencil questionnaire or using a tablet computer
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or breast feeding, use of medicated eye drops in last month (Artificial tears ok), diagnosis of autoimmune or rheumatologic disease (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, crohn's disease, lupus, multiple sclerosis, etc), heart condition requiring daily medications (e.g. angina, congestive heart failure), COPD or asthma requiring daily inhalers (rescue inhalers ok), history of cancer in the past 2 years (skin cancer is ok), use of oral antihistamine medications (e.g. benadryl, claritin, clarinex, zyrtec, allegra, etc), use of oral anticholinergic medications (e.g. scopolamine, ditropan, detrol, ipratropium, etc)
90 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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