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SQ-LIP-000008 · v1.7 (archived) · View current version →

Is lipedema associated with fibromyalgia and other chronic-pain conditions?

ComorbiditiesPain
Also asked as
Bottom line

Fibromyalgia is reported in roughly 10–40% of people with lipedema across multiple studies—far above general-population rates—and pain, fatigue, and joint complaints are nearly universal in lipedema, with the strongest mechanistic evidence pointing to a localized, peripheral process in affected tissue rather than the central sensitization typical of fibromyalgia. Whether the two conditions are truly linked by shared biology, or whether they co-occur partly because overlapping pain symptoms make each easier to diagnose in the presence of the other, remains unknown.

Executive synthesis
Current answer
Lipedema is consistently associated with chronic pain and co-occurs with fibromyalgia at frequencies well above general-population estimates, but all data are observational…
Knowledge state
Emerging · Evidence confidence: low (GRADE) · Stability: Evolving
⚠ none indexed yet — the registry may under-detect disconfirming evidence (a known limitation)
Evidence verification
19/19 sources independently verified
Main limitation
No high-quality, controlled, adjusted study establishes whether lipedema and fibromyalgia are independently associated or merely overlap due to shared pain symptomatology and…
Latest change
Answer recompiled after human curation of the claim set. · v1.7
Knowledge freshness
84% recent · current evidence base
Last updated
2026-06-02 · v1.7

Created 2026-05-30 · Human review: not yet reviewed

Current synthesis · v1.7 · AI-compiled — not a verdict

Based on currently indexed evidence, lipedema is consistently associated with chronic pain and co-occurs with fibromyalgia at frequencies well above general-population estimates, but all data are observational, largely cross-sectional, and of low-to-moderate quality; no high-quality controlled, adjusted study establishes the association or its causal direction. Multiple cross-sectional studies using ACR 2016 criteria report fibromyalgia prevalence in lipedema cohorts ranging from ~10% to ~40%: approximately 34–35% in two studies (DOI:10.1089/lrb.2023.0038; DOI:10.2147/jpr.s315736), 39.6% in a comparative study where the comorbid lipedema+fibromyalgia subgroup had significantly higher pain (median VAS 60 vs 27, p<0.001) and worse SF-36 quality of life across all 8 domains (DOI:10.47582/jompac.1301253), and a lower 10% in a study primarily contrasting lipedema with Dercum's disease (28%, P=0.0003) (DOI:10.1038/ijo.2016.205); fibromyalgia also appeared as a self-reported comorbidity (n=14) in a survey where 88.3% reported pain (DOI:10.1007/s13555-018-0241-6). Conversely, an earlier study found lipedema in 50% of women already meeting ACR fibromyalgia criteria, with longer fibromyalgia diagnostic delay and younger menarche as risk factors and pain correlated with widespread pain (r=0.62) (DOI:10.1177/02683555251321042). Pain burden in lipedema is substantial: 100% of lipedema patients in one matched-control study reported pain versus 70.8% of controls, with 43.2% reporting severe pain-related disability versus 9.2% (rho≈0.61 with depressive symptoms) (DOI:10.3390/life14030295); a Swiss cohort of 381 patients reported pain in 87.9% and high fatigue in 56.1% (DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0319099). Musculoskeletal involvement is common—joint/knee pain in ~56–58% (DOI:10.1590/1677-5449.202101981; DOI:10.1111/ddg.15064; DOI:10.3390/jcm14207195), with one large cohort (n=860) reporting joint pain (58%), migraine (35%), and insomnia (36%) but not enumerating fibromyalgia (DOI:10.1111/ddg.15064). Migraine appears as a frequent comorbidity (7–35% across studies), and one retrospective surgical cohort noted 66.7% of patients with prior migraine reported postoperative reduction after liposuction (DOI:10.1111/dth.14534). Mechanistically, the emerging picture favors a peripheral rather than central pain process: cutaneous hypersensitivity and neuropathic features increased with disease stage alongside reduced dermal neuronal density and elevated CGRP/NGF (DOI:10.3390/ijms231810313), and quantitative sensory testing in non-obese women showed reduced pressure pain threshold and increased vibration detection threshold selectively in the affected thigh but not the hand, with no central alterations, implicating ECM stiffness and mechanoceptive amplification (DOI:10.1111/obr.13953). A randomized trial (n=70) found that diet-induced pain reduction was NOT associated with changes in hsCRP, cytokines, fibrosis markers, or ketosis, arguing against systemic inflammation as the pain mediator (DOI:10.1016/j.cdnut.2025.104571). Additional pain-related features include fatigue (~75%) and frequently reported hypermobility, though reported hypermobility prevalence varies widely (50.5% in a surgical series vs 4.2% by Beighton≥5 in the Swiss cohort) (DOI:10.1515/hmbci-2017-0076; DOI:10.1097/gox.0000000000005436; DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0319099). Causal direction and whether shared mechanisms underlie the co-occurrence remain unestablished.

A synthesis rendered from the currently indexed evidence — versioned, not a verdict.

⚙ AI consolidation: Claude Opus 4.8 · 2026-06-02 — evidence-bounded; the AI does not opine

What’s new in v1.7

Answer recompiled after human curation of the claim set.

Knowledge freshness = share of the 19 indexed evidence sources from the last 5 years (newest 2025, oldest 2017) . Low freshness flags an ageing evidence base — not that the answer is wrong.

Evidence over time

20172025Differentiating lipedema and Dercum’s disease — Beltran & Herbst (2017) · consistentLipedema: friend and foe — Torre et al. (2018) · contextualExploration of Patient Characteristics and Quality of Life in Patients with Lipoedema Using a Survey — Romeijn et al. (2018) · consistentPotential Effects of a Modified Mediterranean Diet on Body Composition in Lipoedema — Di Renzo et al. (2021) · contextualCommon and Contrasting Characteristics of the Chronic Soft-Tissue Pain Conditions Fibromyalgia and Lipedema — Angst et al. (2021) · consistentPrevalência e fatores de risco para lipedema no Brasil — Amato et al. (2022) · consistentIndications of Peripheral Pain, Dermal Hypersensitivity, and Neurogenic Inflammation in Patients with Lipedema — Chakraborty et al. (2022) · refiningDisease progression and comorbidities in lipedema patients: A 10‐year retrospective analysis — Ghods et al. (2022) · contextualLipedema: Insights into Morphology, Pathophysiology, and Challenges — Poojari et al. (2022) · contextualBreaking the circle‐effectiveness of liposuction in lipedema — Seefeldt et al. (2023) · contextualComorbidity of lipedema and fibromyalgia; effects on disease severity, pain and health-related quality of life — ÇAKIT et al. (2023) · consistentLipedema Reduction Surgery Improves Pain, Mobility, Physical Function, and Quality of Life: Case Series Report — Wright et al. (2023) · contextualPrevalence of Fibromyalgia Syndrome in Women with Lipedema and Its Effect on Anxiety, Depression, and Quality of Life — Cagliyan Turk et al. (2024) · consistentHealth Implications of Lipedema: Analysis of Patient Questionnaires and Population-Based Matched Controls — Kempa et al. (2024) · consistentLipedema awareness in fibromyalgia — Bolkan Günaydın et al. (2025) · consistentClinical characteristics, comorbidities, and correlation with advanced lipedema stages: A retrospective study from a Swiss referral centre — Luta et al. (2025) · contextualLipedema and Hypermobility Spectrum Disorders Sharing Pathophysiology: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study — Fiengo & Sbarbati (2025) · consistentChanges in Cytokines and Fibrotic Growth Factors after Low-Carbohydrate or Low-Fat Low-Energy Diets in Females with Lipedema — Lundanes et al. (2025) · contextualLipedema: Progress, Challenges, and the Road Ahead — Cifarelli (2025) · refining

consistent   conflicting   refining / contextual Each dot is a study, placed by year and coloured by whether the linked claim supports or contradicts the answer. As the surveillance loop runs, claim revisions and new evidence will extend this timeline.

Answer over time

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Consistent claims

Conflicting claims

Refining / contextual

Major uncertainty

No high-quality, controlled, adjusted study establishes whether lipedema and fibromyalgia are independently associated or merely overlap due to shared pain symptomatology and ascertainment bias; causal direction is unknown, fibromyalgia prevalence estimates vary widely (10–50%) by cohort and ascertainment method, and the strongest mechanistic evidence (RCT, QST) actually points to a localized/peripheral pain process distinct from fibromyalgia's central sensitization, raising the question of whether the co-occurrence is causal, coincidental, or a diagnostic artifact.

Version history

Key references

DOI:10.1177/02683555251321042 · DOI:10.1590/1677-5449.202101981 · DOI:10.3390/nu13020358 · DOI:10.1089/lrb.2023.0038 · DOI:10.2147/jpr.s315736 · DOI:10.3390/life14030295 · DOI:10.1111/ddg.15064 · DOI:10.1515/hmbci-2017-0076 · DOI:10.3390/ijms231810313 · DOI:10.47582/jompac.1301253 · DOI:10.1038/ijo.2016.205 · DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0319099 · DOI:10.3390/jcm14207195 · DOI:10.1111/dth.14534 · DOI:10.1007/s13555-018-0241-6 · DOI:10.1016/j.cdnut.2025.104571 · DOI:10.1097/gox.0000000000005436 · DOI:10.3390/biomedicines10123081 · DOI:10.1111/obr.13953