Background Fibromyalgia (FM) profoundly affects not only physical functioning but also the lived experience of time, space, the body, selfhood, and relationships. Although many qualitative studies describe these challenges, their heterogeneity makes it difficult to identify common experiential patterns. The aim of this study was to synthesize first-person qualitative accounts of adults with fibromyalgia in order to identify the core experiential structures that characterize how the condition transforms temporality, embodiment, selfhood, spatiality, and intersubjective life. Methods We conducted a scoping review of 72 studies reporting first-person accounts of adults diagnosed with FM. Following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we extracted patient quotations and analyzed them using Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR), incorporating triangulation, consensus-building, reflexive dialogue, and external auditing. Results Across studies, FM emerged as a disruption of core experiential structures. Patients described collapsed futurity, fluctuating daily rhythms, and a biographical split between “before” and “after” illness. Their lived space narrowed due to pain, immobility, and fear of unpredictability. Embodiment became marked by pervasive pain, exhaustion, and bodily estrangement. Selfhood was threatened by loss of roles and diminished agency, while invisibility, disbelief, and isolation profoundly shaped intersubjective experience. Diagnosis brought both relief and misrecognition, sometimes fostering over-identification with the label. Conclusion FM constitutes an existential transformation rather than solely a somatic condition. Clinicians should adopt phenomenologically informed, person-centred approaches that recognize patients' lived experiences, avoid reductive interpretations, and support processes of validation, bodily reconnection, and identity reconstruction.

Living with fibromyalgia: Scoping review of patients' lived experience / Esposito, Cecilia Maria; Bottaro, Federico; Carloni, Maria Chiara; Brambilla, Paolo; Stanghellini, Giovanni. - In: JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH. - ISSN 0022-3999. - ELETTRONICO. - 207:(2026), pp. 112656.0-112656.0. [10.1016/j.jpsychores.2026.112656]

Living with fibromyalgia: Scoping review of patients' lived experience

Esposito, Cecilia Maria;Stanghellini, Giovanni
2026

Abstract

Background Fibromyalgia (FM) profoundly affects not only physical functioning but also the lived experience of time, space, the body, selfhood, and relationships. Although many qualitative studies describe these challenges, their heterogeneity makes it difficult to identify common experiential patterns. The aim of this study was to synthesize first-person qualitative accounts of adults with fibromyalgia in order to identify the core experiential structures that characterize how the condition transforms temporality, embodiment, selfhood, spatiality, and intersubjective life. Methods We conducted a scoping review of 72 studies reporting first-person accounts of adults diagnosed with FM. Following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we extracted patient quotations and analyzed them using Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR), incorporating triangulation, consensus-building, reflexive dialogue, and external auditing. Results Across studies, FM emerged as a disruption of core experiential structures. Patients described collapsed futurity, fluctuating daily rhythms, and a biographical split between “before” and “after” illness. Their lived space narrowed due to pain, immobility, and fear of unpredictability. Embodiment became marked by pervasive pain, exhaustion, and bodily estrangement. Selfhood was threatened by loss of roles and diminished agency, while invisibility, disbelief, and isolation profoundly shaped intersubjective experience. Diagnosis brought both relief and misrecognition, sometimes fostering over-identification with the label. Conclusion FM constitutes an existential transformation rather than solely a somatic condition. Clinicians should adopt phenomenologically informed, person-centred approaches that recognize patients' lived experiences, avoid reductive interpretations, and support processes of validation, bodily reconnection, and identity reconstruction.
2026
207
0
0
Esposito, Cecilia Maria; Bottaro, Federico; Carloni, Maria Chiara; Brambilla, Paolo; Stanghellini, Giovanni
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1468836
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