Abstract
Objective:
To determine if the chronic pain and sleep disturbances experienced by patients with fibromyalgia can be improved by sleeping on a magnetic mattress pad.
Design:
A double-blind randomized controlled trial.
Setting:
Patients’ homes and the private practice office of the principal investigator.
Patients:
Thirty-five female subjects diagnosed with fibromyalgia syndrome were recruited. Thirty met inclusion/exclusion criteria and entered the study. Twenty-five completed it. One was lost to follow-up. Three were withdrawn for protocol violations and one because of an intercurrent hospitalization.
Intervention:
Sleeping on an experimental (magnetized at a magnet surface field strength of 1100 ± 50 Gauss and delivering 200–600 Gauss to the skin surface or a sham (non-magnetized) mattress pad over a 16 week period.
Main Outcome Measures:
Visual Analog Scales (VAS) for global wellbeing, pain, sleep, fatigue and tiredness on awakening; Total Myalgic Score; Pain Distribution Drawings; and a modified Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire.
Results:
Subjects sleeping on the experimental mattress pad experienced a significant decrease in pain (
Conclusions:
Sleeping on a magnetic mattress pad, with a magnet surface field strength of 1100 ± 50 Gauss, delivering 200–600 Gauss at the skin surface provides statistically significant and clinically relevant pain relief and sleep improvement in subjects with fibromyalgia. No adverse reactions were noted during the 16-week trial period.
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