Nutrients (Apr 2024)

Effects of Prolonged Medical Fasting during an Inpatient, Multimodal, Nature-Based Treatment on Pain, Physical Function, and Psychometric Parameters in Patients with Fibromyalgia: An Observational Study

  • Daniela A. Koppold,
  • Farid I. Kandil,
  • Anna Müller,
  • Oliver Güttler,
  • Nico Steckhan,
  • Sara Meiss,
  • Carolin Breinlinger,
  • Esther Nelle,
  • Anika Rajput Khokhar,
  • Michael Jeitler,
  • Etienne Hanslian,
  • Jan Moritz Fischer,
  • Andreas Michalsen,
  • Christian S. Kessler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16071059
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 1059

Abstract

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Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a common chronic pain disorder and often occurs as a concomitant disease in rheumatological diseases. Managing FMS takes a complex approach and often involves various non-pharmacological therapies. Fasting interventions have not been in the focus of research until recently, but preliminary data have shown effects on short- and medium-term pain as well as on physical and psychosomatic outcomes in different chronic pain disorders. This single-arm observational study investigated the effects of prolonged fasting (3–12 days, p p p p p p < 0.0001) improved during inpatient treatment, without longer-lasting effects thereafter. During the study period, no serious adverse events were reported. The results suggest that patients with FMS can profit from a prolonged therapeutic fasting intervention integrated into a complex multimodal inpatient treatment in terms of quality of life, pain, and disease-specific functional parameters. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03785197.

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