FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE
FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE · ONE OF JUST 8 NATIONWIDE
Medically reviewed by Shane D. Naidoo, MD
Medical Director, TrufaMED Urgent Care & Concierge Medicine
Board-Certified, Emergency Medicine
Last reviewed: May 2026
Most fibromyalgia patients have a story about an emergency department visit. The triage nurse heard "fibromyalgia" and visibly checked out. The provider ordered the same labs that have been normal for years. The discharge paperwork said "fibromyalgia flare" and "follow up with your primary." Nothing actually happened. The patient went home and lay on the couch for three days.
This is not what urgent care is supposed to be. The point of urgent care is to bridge the gap between a primary physician who is not available right now and an emergency department that is built for a different problem. For a fibromyalgia patient in a flare, the right urgent care visit looks different than the wrong one. Here is what to ask for, what to bring, and what we can actually do at TrufaMED.
Urgent care fits when:
Go to the ER for any of:
These are not fibromyalgia. The ER is the right setting and TrufaMED will redirect there if the clinical picture supports it.
At a TrufaMED urgent care visit during a fibromyalgia flare, the realistic menu includes:
Our IV menu is on the IV therapy page. Our clinical team is on the staff page.
Be direct: urgent care is not the right setting for long-term fibromyalgia management. We do not start or continue long-term opioid therapy. We do not initiate complex medication regimens that require monthly titration and quarterly labs. We do not run a multi-week diagnostic workup in a single visit. Those belong with rheumatology, pain specialists, or our concierge medicine program when ongoing care is part of the picture.
The visit goes faster when the front desk knows what you are asking for. A useful opening:
"I have fibromyalgia. I am in a flare. I am asking for labs to rule out a comorbid issue, IV hydration, and a short course of something to help me sleep through the next forty-eight hours. I am not asking for opioids. Here is my medication list."
Most providers will respond well to that level of clarity. It is direct, it sets a realistic ask, and it preempts the assumption that the visit is about controlled substances.
The evidence for IV magnesium specifically in fibromyalgia is limited and mixed. Some patients respond meaningfully; others do not. Mechanistically, magnesium has effects on muscle excitability and nerve conduction that could plausibly help, and clinical experience supports that some patients reproducibly feel better after an infusion. We are honest about the uncertainty. We are also honest that supportive care during a flare can be more useful than the literature for that specific therapy suggests.
IV hydration is less controversial. Many patients in a fibromyalgia flare are dehydrated, post-viral, or both. Replenishing volume reliably helps fatigue, headache, and orthostatic symptoms.
Both are screened for safety. People with kidney disease, certain heart conditions, or specific electrolyte derangements may not be candidates for either. The physician encounter is what makes the screening real.
Yes. Urgent care can provide supportive care during an acute flare: IV hydration, IV magnesium where appropriate, basic labs to rule out comorbid conditions, and prescription support for non-controlled adjuncts. Urgent care is not the right setting for long-term fibromyalgia management, which belongs with rheumatology or concierge medicine.
Go to the ER for sudden severe chest pain, shortness of breath at rest, focal neurologic symptoms, severe abdominal pain, syncope with injury, or a sudden severe headache. These are not fibromyalgia. The ER is also the right setting if a flare is paired with a fever above 102 degrees, signs of infection, or new red-flag symptoms that have not been evaluated.
A baseline that rules out the conditions that mimic fibromyalgia or coexist with it: complete blood count, comprehensive metabolic panel, TSH, vitamin D, B12, ferritin, and an inflammatory marker such as hsCRP. ANA may be added if autoimmune disease is in the differential. We do not run every test on every visit; we run what the encounter supports.
No. IV magnesium and IV hydration are used as supportive care during fibromyalgia flares. They are not FDA approved as treatments for fibromyalgia. Patients respond variably. The decision to offer IV magnesium is individualized and screened for cardiac, kidney, and electrolyte safety first.
We can prescribe non-controlled adjuncts where clinically appropriate. We do not start or continue long-term opioid therapy at urgent care. Long-term medication management belongs with the patient's primary physician, rheumatologist, or pain specialist.
Come with a one-page summary: diagnosis date, current medications and supplements, what triggered this flare, and what specifically you are asking for today. Most providers respond well to clarity.
Yes. Bring everything. Recent labs, imaging reports, specialist notes, medication lists. We use them.
TrufaMED accepts most major insurance for urgent care visits. IV therapy and certain wellness services may be self-pay depending on the indication. We can verify coverage before any non-standard service is provided.
Sixty to one hundred twenty minutes from arrival to discharge if labs and IV are part of the visit. The wait to be seen is typically under four minutes.
A quieter setting, a faster door-to-clinician time, on-site labs and X-ray when needed, IV options without admission, and discharge in under two hours in most cases.
If you are in a flare and want a visit that does not start from disbelief, walk in to TrufaMED at 9445 Harding Avenue in Surfside. To call ahead and speak with a clinician, the number is (305) 537-6396. To explore ongoing care rather than acute visits, see concierge medicine.