MediaWiki API result
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See the complete documentation, or the API help for more information.
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{
"logid": 162,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Trigger Point",
"pageid": 154,
"logpage": 154,
"revid": 232,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-20T00:06:38Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"=General Overview of Myofascial Trigger Points = ---- == A. Background == === Prevalence === Myofascial trigger points (TrPs) are extremely common and become a painful part of nearly everyone's life at some time or another. '''Latent TrPs''', which often cause motor dysfunction (stiffness and restricted range of motion) without pain, are far more common than '''active TrPs''', which additionally cause pain. Among 200 unselected asymptomatic young adults, focal tender...\""
},
{
"logid": 161,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Hypometabolism and TrPs",
"pageid": 153,
"logpage": 153,
"revid": 225,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:43:29Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Hypometabolism''' (thyroid inadequacy) describes the condition of someone whose serum levels of thyroid hormones are in the low euthyroid range, or just below the \"normal\" two standard deviation limit. It is covered in depth as a perpetuating factor for myofascial trigger points (TrPs) because, when present, the results of specific therapy for myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) can be '''utterly frustrating''' until the hypometabolism is corrected \u2014 patients obtain only...\""
},
{
"logid": 160,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Calcium and TrPs",
"pageid": 152,
"logpage": 152,
"revid": 224,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:43:00Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Calcium''' is the most abundant mineral in the human body and is essential to muscle contraction, nerve impulse transmission, and the release of acetylcholine (ACh) at the neuromuscular junction \u2014 making it directly relevant to the trigger point (TrP) mechanism. Calcium ions control the molecular machinery that initiates and terminates the actin-myosin interaction at the heart of every muscle twitch, and their dysregulation at the motor endplate is central to the hy...\""
},
{
"logid": 159,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Iron and TrPs",
"pageid": 151,
"logpage": 151,
"revid": 223,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:42:48Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Iron''' is an essential mineral whose deficiency is estimated to be present in 9\u201311% of adolescent girls and women of childbearing age in the United States \u2014 making it the most prevalent micronutrient deficiency in the developed world. Iron deficiency increases the irritability of myofascial trigger points (TrPs) through multiple mechanisms: it impairs oxygen transport to muscle, disrupts oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria, impairs thermoregulation, disturb...\""
},
{
"logid": 158,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Vitamin C and TrPs",
"pageid": 150,
"logpage": 150,
"revid": 222,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:42:32Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Vitamin C (ascorbic acid; L-ascorbic acid)''' is a water-soluble vitamin of major clinical importance to the muscles because it can prevent much postexercise muscle soreness or stiffness, corrects the increase in capillary fragility associated with ascorbic acid deficiency, and interacts strongly with numerous other vitamins important to muscle function. It is the only reducing substance that specifically regulates dopamine beta-monooxygenase activity in chromaffin ce...\""
},
{
"logid": 157,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Folic Acid and TrPs",
"pageid": 149,
"logpage": 149,
"revid": 221,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:42:14Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Folic acid''' (pteroylglutamic acid; folate; folacin) is a water-soluble B-complex vitamin whose insufficiency is '''the most common vitamin inadequacy''' and among those most likely to perpetuate myofascial trigger points (TrPs). Its metabolism is inseparably intertwined with that of vitamin B\u2081\u2082 \u2014 the two vitamins share critical pathways, and treatment of one without establishing the status of the other risks precipitating a deficiency of the second. This page...\""
},
{
"logid": 156,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Vitamin B12 Cobalamin and TrPs",
"pageid": 148,
"logpage": 148,
"revid": 220,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:42:00Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Vitamin B\u2081\u2082 (cobalamin)''' is one of the most structurally complex of all vitamins and the only one whose only primary food source is bacteria. It is considered together with folic acid because their metabolism and function are intimately linked \u2014 the two independently essential enzyme cofactors share critical pathways, and deficiency of one can mask or precipitate deficiency of the other. Both are required for DNA synthesis, and inadequacy of either aggravates...\""
},
{
"logid": 155,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Vitamin B1 Thiamine and TrPs",
"pageid": 147,
"logpage": 147,
"revid": 219,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:41:38Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Vitamin B\u2081 (thiamine)''' is an essential water-soluble vitamin whose primary biological role is in the oxidative metabolism of glucose. It is the vitamin most directly linked to the energy crisis at the heart of myofascial trigger point (TrP) pathophysiology. Thiamine insufficiency increases the susceptibility of muscles to TrPs that are resistant to local therapy until the serum thiamine level is raised to the mean normal level or above. Thiamine has been relative...\""
},
{
"logid": 154,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Vitamin B6 Pyridoxine and TrPs",
"pageid": 146,
"logpage": 146,
"revid": 218,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:41:22Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Vitamin B\u2086 (pyridoxine)''' is considered the single most important vitamin in myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) because of its role in energy metabolism, in nerve function, and critically in the '''synthesis and/or metabolism of nearly all the neurotransmitters'''. It is also essential to the metabolism of many proteins, including several neurotransmitters. Pyridoxine deficiency is almost never found alone \u2014 it usually occurs with deficiency of other B-complex vitami...\""
},
{
"logid": 153,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Concept:Perpetuating Factors",
"pageid": 145,
"logpage": 145,
"revid": 217,
"params": {},
"type": "create",
"action": "create",
"user": "Yatreyu",
"timestamp": "2026-04-19T19:29:38Z",
"comment": "Created page with \"'''Perpetuating factors''' are the systemic, structural, metabolic, and psychological conditions that keep myofascial trigger points (TrPs) active and prevent them from resolving spontaneously or with specific local treatment. Recognition and correction of perpetuating factors is, according to Travell and Simons, '''the most important single aspect''' of myofascial pain management, and the most neglected. The clinical importance of this concept is illustrated by the apo...\""
}
]
}
}