Chronic fatigue syndrome or just plain tired?

The complaint of unremitting fatigue has been around for centuries. Over the years, people with fatigue have been said to suffer from myalgic encephalomyelitis, Icelandic disease, neurasthenia, nervous exhaustion, febricula and Yuppie flu.1,2 Interest in the illness known today as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) grew when a cluster of patients in Nevada were found to have a chronic mononucleosis-like syndrome associated with persistently high titres of antibodies to Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) in the late 1980s.2 Today, the role of EBV and other potential viral and immunologic triggers of CFS remains unclear, and even in the wake of a recent flurry of research, the pathophysiology of CFS is poorly understood and no single diagnostic test can confirm its presence.

While CFS support groups lobby for disability coverage for individuals with CFS and insurance companies fight the claims, neither the public nor the medical community unanimously agrees on the existence of CFS as a real clinical entity. Some believe it is merely a presentation of depression or other psychosomatic illness; others argue that individuals claiming to have CFS have seized upon a convenient diagnosis to explain the effects of overwork or “normal” fatigue.

You can read the rest of this article here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1229654/pdf/cmaj_159_5_519.pdf

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What causes chronic fatigue? [CMAJ. 1999]

What causes chronic fatigue? [CMAJ. 1999]

 

Source: Caplan C. Chronic fatigue syndrome or just plain tired? CMAJ. 1998 Sep 8;159(5):519-20. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1229654/

 

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