bits of extreme focus (such as a complicated radiocommunications project)
Which'd be one of the connections to ASD (autism spectrum <s>disorder</s> conditions)... reminding of them being commonly co-morbid.
I believe fibro has a relation to processing overloads... a little like the way PTSD works.
Yeah, agreed, however you mean that
... Not quite sure if you mean PTSD as contributing to fibro or as effect of processing overloads, but praps both. Many (but not all) of us did have quite a bit of stress, which already is a processing overload, and studies have found us revealing quite a bit (20%, some say more) of trauma in our pasts.
My doctor says we (those on the spectrum) can be more sensitive to pain.
Hmm - now that was a surprising one I hadn't heard of before. Looking it up in 2 studies and a website of someone on the spectrum talking about those or other studies, I'd say: it's much more complicated. Actually generally autists were long regarded as being pain hyposensitive, that was one of the criteria. Now this is opening up and a more mixed picture, but still no researchers have been able to say generally more sensitive to pain, if at all a minority more versus a larger majority that seem less sensitive to pain. The problems being very autism specific: In a world that often causes emotional pain, so difficult to understand and cope with, why shouldn't physical pain also be something to be oversensitive to. And whatever amount of pain there is, how can this be communicated, social communication being especially difficult, while pain communication is a challenge for every doc and patient.
Also I can't see what the intention of the doc who said that is as regards fibro: Are they saying people on the spectrum are more likely to get fibro? Or that the fibro they get might be more painful? Is it about the pain
tolerance or about the pain
threshold or both, and how would this compare to the normal big differences we've talked about a few times here? From that perspective it seems a bit silly for the doc to say this, but as it's out of context it's best to see what the context was first...