Small Fiber Neuropathy Doesn't Explain Fibromyalgia — Here's Why
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Summary
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Small Fiber Neuropathy and Fibromyalgia: Correlation, Not the Cause
The script examines why findings of small fiber neuropathy (SFN) in fibromyalgia created hope for an objective “proof” of pain, yet argues this link is often misinterpreted as causation. It explains SFN, diagnosed via skin punch biopsy showing reduced nerve fiber density, and notes studies finding positive biopsies in about 40–60% of fibromyalgia patients, including a 2018 meta-analysis reporting 49% prevalence. The script outlines why SFN is not a smoking-gun cause: it appears in only about half of patients, nerve loss severity doesn’t reliably match pain severity, and SFN occurs in other conditions. It contrasts fibromyalgia with classic SFN in onset age, symptom patterns, comorbidities, and nerve-loss distribution, and presents central sensitization (nociplastic pain) as the primary driver, with SFN possibly a trigger in some or a downstream effect in others, emphasizing treatments targeting the central nervous system.
00:00 SFN Fibro Controversy
01:54 What Is SFN
02:57 Biopsy Evidence Buzz
04:04 Correlation Not Cause
05:54 SFN vs Fibro Differences
07:30 Central Sensitization Explained
10:12 Where SFN Fits In
11:10 Back Pain MRI Analogy
11:56 Treatment Focus And Wrap
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When I started this podcast and YouTube Channel—and the book that came before it—I had my patients in mind. Office visits are short, but understanding complex, often misunderstood conditions like fibromyalgia takes time. That’s why I created this space: to offer education, validation, and hope. If you’ve been told fibromyalgia “isn’t real” or that it’s “all in your head,” know this—I see you. I believe you. This podcast aims to affirm your experience and explain the science behind it. Whether you live with fibromyalgia, care for someone who does, or are a healthcare professional looking to better support patients, you’ll find trusted, evidence-based insights here, drawn from my 29+ years as an MD.
Please remember to talk with your doctor about your symptoms and care. This content doesn’t replace per...