Phantom lymphadenopathy. An association with chronic fatigue syndrome

Comment on: Phantom lymphadenopathy. An association with chronic fatigue syndrome. [Postgrad Med J. 2003]

 

Shee reports an association between chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and what he regards as a “phantom lymphadenopathy”.1 However, his failure to observe “true lymphadenopathy” in patients with CFS complaining of swollen lymph glands does not exclude a real, albeit subclinical enlargement of those glands, because he did not compare their dimensions with the ones that were measurable before the appearance of patients’ complaints.

As someone who suffered from CFS and reported on its dramatic resolution thanks to old and new drugs for Addison’s disease,2 I clearly remember that my lymph nodes, just a few days after the abrupt onset of CFS, became mildly painful and began to swell gradually. This slow process of enlargement lasted approximately one month. However, even when my lymph glands stopped swelling further (but continued to be mildly painful), their dimensions were still clinically within normal limits. This may indirectly explain why Shee found that “careful examination did not confirm lymphadenopathy” in CFS patients with “self diagnosed enlarged lymph glands”.

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1742656/pdf/v079p00185a.pdf

 

Source: Baschetti R. Phantom lymphadenopathy. An association with chronic fatigue syndrome. Postgrad Med J. 2003 Mar;79(929):185. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1742656/ (Full article)

 

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