June 14, 2016

Supplementing with large doses of Q10 may help reduce pain and fatigue in people who suffer from fibromyalgia. An optimal treatment of the disease may even require focusing on underlying causes.

Fibromyalgia is a type of muscular rheumatism that affects an increasing number of people, mainly women. The symptoms typically include burning muscle pain, impaired muscle strength and pain around the tendons and joints. The human body has around 18 (nine pairs) so-called "tender points". 11 of these are particularly sensitive to pressure. The disease may also cause fatigue, sleep disturbances, headache, cold intolerance, digestive problems, impaired memory, concentration problems, and depression as a result of the persistent symptoms.

Dysfunctions in the mitochondria of the cells and lack of Q10

Although there can be many different underlying causes of fibromyalgia, several studies have shown that both dysfunctions in the mitochondria of muscle cells and lack of Q10 are involved. All cells contain mitochondria, which are minute "powerhouses" that convert fat, carbohydrate, and protein into energy with help from coenzyme Q10 and oxygen. If the mitochondria fail to function properly it affects not only the energy metabolism but even other functions, which the mitochondria undertake in the cells - including monitoring, calcium signaling, and cell division. Unlike cells in general, mitochondria are not able to repair to their own DNA. This makes them highly vulnerable to free radical activity, which is increased tremendously by stress, poisoning, and inflammation. Q10, incidentally, is the only antioxidant that protects mitochondria against oxidative damage caused by free radicals.

We humans produce the major part of our Q10 endogenously, but this production decreases as we grow older. Stress, certain diseases, and various types of medicine may contribute to reducing the body's Q10 levels.

Groundbreaking Q10 study

The Spanish doctor Mario Cordero and his colleagues conducted a groundbreaking study of 20 female fibromyalgia sufferers. For a period of 40 days, half the women took three 100 mg Q10 capsules daily, while the other half took dummy pills (placebo). The study was double-blind, which means that neither the researchers nor the patients knew who got what until after the study had been completed and the results were unveiled.

According to the self-reported feedback from the fibromyalgia questionnaires, the Q10 group noted a 52% improvement of their symptoms compared with the placebo group. More precisely, the Q10-treated patients had 65% less pain, and the number of painful tender points was reduced by 44% compared with the placebo group.

The researchers also observed less inflammation, improvements of various antioxidant enzymes, and improved mitochondrial regeneration.

On behalf of the study results, the researchers consider daily supplementation with three times 100 mg of Q10 a useful new therapy form that not only reduces pain but also increases quality of life in fibromyalgia patients.