Abnormal activity of the sympathetic nervous system may be involved in the pathogenesis of chronic pain syndromes. This article
reviews the animal studies of sympathetically induced pain behavior, the controversy of sympathetically maintained pain in
clinical practice, and the dysautonomic nature of fibromyalgia (FM). FM has neuropathic pain features (stimuli-independent
pain state accompanied by allodynia and paresthesias). The proposal of FM as a sympathetically maintained pain syndrome is
based on the controlled studies showing that patients with FM display signs of relentless sympathetic hyperactivity and that
the pain is submissive to sympathetic blockade and is rekindled by norepinephrine injections. Dysautonomia also may explain
the multisystem features of FM.