From: BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2010 Jul 30;11(1):171.
Metabolic syndrome has become increasingly common worldwide. Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of risk factors defined by high fasting glucose and triglycerides, low HDL cholesterol, high blood pressure, and abdominal obesity that increases the risk for cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and all-cause mortality. The prevalence of metabolic syndrome in the US population is approximately 35%. In Eastern Finland the corresponding prevalence has been found to be 37%. Neck pain is also a common symptom among the middle-aged population. In a large Finnish population-based study, 24% of men and 37% of women aged at least 30 years had suffered from neck pain during the preceding month.
There are few studies in which the prevalence of pain has been assessed in subjects with metabolic syndrome. In one study females with chronic pain from fibromyalgia were at an increased risk of metabolic syndrome. Another study found that subjects with metabolic syndrome were more likely to have problems with pain symptoms. It has been suggested that stress is related to both metabolic syndrome and neck pain. Low physical activity has been found to be associated with metabolic syndrome and musculoskeletal pain. Some studies have found an association between obesity and neck pain. Because visceral obesity is one of the main features of metabolic syndrome, it could be proposed that metabolic syndrome is also related to neck pain. It has been speculated that both metabolic syndrome and persistent chronic pain syndromes are related to hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal stress axis dysfunction. Therefore, it could be expected that the prevalence of neck pain is elevated in subjects with metabolic syndrome. Thus, if there were common features in the background of these disorders, the authors hypothesized that neck pain is more prevalent among subjects with metabolic syndrome than among those without metabolic syndrome. In this study the authors aimed to analyse the prevalence of neck pain in subjects with metabolic syndrome.