Abstract Criteria for fibromyalgia developed from the conceptualization and hypotheses of Smythe and Moldofsky in 1977 and gradually evolved to a set of classification criteria endorsed by the American College of Rheumatology that emphasized tender points and widespread pain, measures of decreased pain threshold. In 2010, American College of Rheumatology fibromyalgia diagnostic criteria were published that abandoned the tender point count and placed increased emphasis of patient symptoms. The 2010 criteria also contained severity scales and offered physicians the opportunity to assess polysymptomatic distress on a continuous scale. This enabled physicians who were opposed to the idea of fibromyalgia to also assess and diagnose patients using an alternative nomenclature.
What tools do you track to assess progress toward these goals?
New answer by at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (February 2, 2026)
Great question. I explicitly tell my patients that I have no magic-bullet– no penicillin or prednisone-adjacent pill – that will swiftly and reliably alleviate the...