How to Cope With Rare Fibromyalgia Symptoms

Fibromyalgia is a chronic, or long-term, disorder defined by pain and tenderness throughout your body, accompanied by fatigue. While these are the most common symptoms, fibromyalgia can be accompanied by a wide range of symptoms, some of which are better known than others. Knowing about these rare fibromyalgia symptoms is the first step toward learning how to cope with their effects.

Fibromyalgia Symptoms You Probably Don’t Know About

Heightened Sensitivity to Touch

It’s thought that fibromyalgia disrupts the systems in the brain that are responsible for modulating your experience of pain and that this disruption is responsible for the heightened sensory sensitivities that can accompany the condition.

One way this hypersensitivity can manifest is allodynia, which is when you feel pain from a touch- or temperature-related stimulus that wouldn’t normally be painful.

“Our body has to process all of the information that’s constantly coming in by way of the senses and filter out 99 percent of it,” says Jacob Teitelbaum, MD, the author of From Fatigued to Fantastic. “Separating the signal from the noise, so to speak, takes energy, and energy is precisely what people with fibromyalgia don’t have.”

Experiencing these heightened sensitivities, alone or in combination with one another, can quickly become overwhelming and make day-to-day activities difficult.

How to Cope With Sensory Sensitivities

To start with, it’s important to be very gentle with your body, says Aly Cohen, MD, a fellow of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and the founder of Integrative Rheumatology Associates and TheSmartHuman.com health education platform. “I counsel my patients with fibromyalgia or any kind of chronic pain not to push themselves too hard,” Dr. Cohen says. “Learn to say ‘no’ to events and requirements if you can get away with it and give your body an opportunity to rest.”