Abstract:
OBJECTIVES: To compare the frequency of persistent symptoms up to 8 years after illness onset in adolescents diagnosed as having chronic fatigue syndrome, idiopathic chronic fatigue, and unexplained fatigue for less than 6 months, and to determine if hospital admission is associated with outcome.
DESIGN: A cohort study using questionnaire follow-up.
SETTING: A tertiary referral hospital.
PATIENTS: Consecutive adolescents referred for assessment of persistent fatigue were identified and retrospectively divided into 3 groups according to the diagnostic criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and idiopathic chronic fatigue.
INTERVENTION: A questionnaire was designed and administered by telephone at a mean of 4.57 years after the initial examination.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The persistence of self-reported symptoms was compared with respect to patient group and admission.
RESULTS: Outcome data were obtained for 34 (69%) of the 49 eligible subjects. Twenty-five percent of the chronic fatigue syndrome group showed near to complete improvement, 31% showed partial improvement, and 44% showed no improvement. The idiopathic chronic fatigue group had near to complete recovery in 50%, partial in 10%, and no improvement in 40%. Those with unexplained fatigue for less than 6 months had all recovered. There was no difference between the outcome of the subjects admitted to the hospital and those managed as outpatients.
CONCLUSIONS: Adolescents with less than 6 months of fatigue have a good outcome. Unexplained fatigue lasting more than 6 months has a similar outcome regardless of the presence of minor criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome.
Comment in: Adolescent chronic fatigue syndrome. [Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2004]
Source: Gill AC, Dosen A, Ziegler JB. Chronic fatigue syndrome in adolescents: a follow-up study. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2004 Mar;158(3):225-9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14993080