Chronic fatigue syndrome following tick-borne diseases

Abstract:

The chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is characterized by a feeling of tiredness persisting for over 6 months, associated with a number of other symptoms including headaches, myalgia and arthralgia, memory and concentration impairment. Its cause is unknown, there are neither objective diagnostic methods, nor causal treatment of the condition. In view of hypotheses suggesting a relationship between CFS and infections, 86 patients with a history of borreliosis or tick-borne encephalitis were examined. In 50% of these cases CFS could be identified. This clinical pattern was found in as many as 71% of the borreliosis patients, while only 24% of those with history of tick-borne encephalitis were diagnosed with CFS. Moreover, in the patients with a history of borreliosis after symptomatic treatment recommended for CFS, an amelioration was noted in as many as 61% of the cases. The findings suggest that the chronic fatigue syndrome is frequent among patients with a history of borreliosis.

 

Source: Gustaw K. Chronic fatigue syndrome following tick-borne diseases. Neurol Neurochir Pol. 2003 Nov-Dec;37(6):1211-21. [Article in Polish] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15174234

 

Cost-effectiveness of cognitive behaviour therapy for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Sir,

In their economic evaluations of treatments for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), Severens et al. compared the cost-effectiveness of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) with those of other interventions, and found that the percentage of CFS patients who improved with CBT performed for 8 months was 31% vs. 9% and 12% for other treatments. Considering that, in one study, 28% of CFS patients treated with low-dose hydrocortisone over just one month virtually recovered,  Severens et al. also should have compared the cost-effectiveness of CBT with that of low-dose hydrocortisone.

Treatment with low-dose hydrocortisone for CFS, besides being intuitively far less costly than CBT, is also better-founded clinically than any psychological therapy, because hydrocortisone corrects the hypocortisolism that characterizes at least some CFS patients. Given that ‘frank hypocortisolism’, rather surprisingly, was one of the exclusion criteria for enrolment in the trial of Cleare et al., the percentage of CFS patients who can be effectively treated with low-dose hydrocortisone in day-to-day health care is likely to be higher than the 28% found in that trial.

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/97/6/378.long

Comment on: Cost-effectiveness of cognitive behaviour therapy for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. [QJM. 2004]

 

Source: Baschetti R. Cost-effectiveness of cognitive behaviour therapy for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. QJM. 2004 Jun;97(6):378-9. http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/97/6/378.long (Full article)

 

Identification of masqueraders of autoimmune disease in the office

Abstract:

There are several rheumatologic and autoimmune disorders that can masquerade as allergic disease. Identification of these conditions in an office setting can be a challenge for the practicing allergist-immunologist. These conditions include rheumatoid and juvenile arthritis, Sjogren’s syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, Behcet’s and antiphospholipid syndromes, systemic sclerosis, vasculitis, sarcoidosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, and fibromyalgia. The article will address these topics and include clinical uses of immunologic tests for diagnosis.

 

Source: Frieri M. Identification of masqueraders of autoimmune disease in the office. Allergy Asthma Proc. 2003 Nov-Dec;24(6):421-9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14763244

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: an endocrine disease off limits for endocrinologists?

Abstract:

Endocrinologists were not included in the multidisciplinary working groups that prepared two recent reports on chronic fatigue syndrome, despite its unequalled clinical overlap with Addison’s disease, which is a classic endocrine disorder. The failure to include at least one endocrinologist in those panels may explain why in their extensive reports there is not a single word about the 42 clinical features that chronic fatigue syndrome shares with Addison’s disease, including all the signs and symptoms listed in the case definition of this syndrome.

Comment in: Dr Baschetti rides/writes again. [Eur J Clin Invest. 2004]

 

Source: Baschetti R. Chronic fatigue syndrome: an endocrine disease off limits for endocrinologists? Eur J Clin Invest. 2003 Dec;33(12):1029-31. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14636284

 

Effects of posttraumatic stress disorder on cardiovascular stress responses in Gulf War veterans with fatiguing illness

Abstract:

Abnormal cardiovascular stress responses have been reported in Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue. However, many of these veterans also suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which could potentially explain the reported abnormalities. To test this hypothesis, 55 Gulf veterans (GVs) with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) or idiopathic chronic fatigue (ICF) were stratified into groups with (N=16) and without (N=39) comorbid PTSD, and were compared to healthy Gulf veterans (N=47) on cardiovascular responses to a series of stressors.

The CFS/ICF with PTSD group had lower blood pressure responses to speech and arithmetic tasks, and more precipitous declines and slower recoveries in blood pressure after standing up than the controls. Similar trends in the CF/ICF group without PTSD were not significant, however. Both CFS/ICF groups had blunted increases in peripheral vascular resistance during mental tasks. However, only the veterans with comorbid PTSD had diminished cardiac output responses to the mental stressors and excessive vasodilatory responses to standing. Symptoms of posttraumatic stress were significant predictors of hypotensive postural responses, but only in veterans reporting a significant exposure to wartime stress.

We conclude that comorbid PTSD contributes to dysregulation of cardiovascular responses to mental and postural stressors in Gulf veterans with medically unexplained fatiguing illness, and may provide a physiological basis for increased somatic complaints in Gulf veterans with symptoms of posttraumatic stress.

 

Source: Peckerman A, Dahl K, Chemitiganti R, LaManca JJ, Ottenweller JE, Natelson BH. Effects of posttraumatic stress disorder on cardiovascular stress responses in Gulf War veterans with fatiguing illness. Auton Neurosci. 2003 Oct 31;108(1-2):63-72. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14614966

 

Patient activism and the struggle for diagnosis: Gulf War illnesses and other medically unexplained physical symptoms in the US

Abstract:

We examine Gulf War illnesses–which include the fatigue, joint pain, dermatitis, headaches, memory loss, blurred vision, diarrhea, and other symptoms reported by Gulf War veterans–in relation to other medically unexplained physical symptoms such as multiple chemical sensitivity,chronic fatigue syndrome, and fibromyalgia. Our intent is to examine the diagnosis negotiations involved in these mysterious diseases, by showing the different forms of legitimacy involved in such interactions.

Factors involved in diagnostic legitimacy are: diagnostic legitimacy in the medical community, lay acceptance of the diagnosis, uncertainty in looking for causes, and social mobilization. We conclude by noting that research may not be able to find any cause for these diseases/conditions; hence, it may be necessary to embrace medical uncertainty, and also to accept patient experience in order to facilitate diagnosis, treatment, and recovery process.

Such a change can alter patients’ expectations and taken-for-granted assumptions about medicine, and perhaps in turn reduce the frequency with which dissatisfied individuals form illness groups that mobilize to challenge what they see as an unresponsive medical system.

 

Source: Zavestoski S, Brown P, McCormick S, Mayer B, D’Ottavi M, Lucove JC. Patient activism and the struggle for diagnosis: Gulf War illnesses and other medically unexplained physical symptoms in the US. Soc Sci Med. 2004 Jan;58(1):161-75. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14572929

 

Aerobic capacity of Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

A large overlap exists between the diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and the unexplained symptoms reported by many Gulf War veterans (GV). Previous investigations have reported reduced aerobic capacity in civilians with CFS. The present investigation examined metabolic responses to maximal exercise in GVs with CFS compared with healthy GVs.

Cardiorespiratory and metabolic responses were recorded during a maximal exercise test on a cycle ergometer. The groups were not different in any demographic category (p > 0.05) or self-reported physical activity (p > 0.05). No differences were observed between groups for maximal oxygen uptake (28.9 +/- 6.7 mL/kg/min for CFS vs. 30.8 +/- 7.1 mL/kg/min for controls; p = 0.39), heart rate (155.8 +/- 16.1 bpm for CFS vs. 163.3 +/- 14.9 bpm for controls; p = 0.17), exercise time (9.6 +/- 1.5 minutes for CFS vs. 10.2 +/- 1.4 minutes for controls; p = 0.26), or workload achieved (208 +/- 36.7 W for CFS vs. 224 +/- 42.9 W for controls; p = 0.25). Likewise, no differences were observed at submaximal intensities (p > 0.05).

Compared with healthy controls, GVs who report multiple medically unexplained symptoms and meet criteria for CFS do not show a decreased exercise capacity. Thus, it does not appear that the pathology of the GVs with CFS includes a deficiency with mobilizing the cardiopulmonary system for strenuous physical effort.

 

Source: Nagelkirk PR, Cook DB, Peckerman A, Kesil W, Sakowski T, Natelson BH, LaManca JJ. Aerobic capacity of Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue syndrome. Mil Med. 2003 Sep;168(9):750-5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14529252

 

Rupture of silicone gel breast implants and symptoms of pain and fatigue

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To compare symptoms of women with silicone gel breast implants and women with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), and to study the effect of rupture of the silicone implant.

METHODS: Five hundred readers of the Dutch silicone breast implant support group magazine were asked to respond if they had been informed by the surgeon about the silicone implant status at operation, and to answer questions about symptoms of CFS. Their complaints were compared with those of 100 female patients with CFS and 40 female controls.

RESULTS: The questionnaires were returned by 319 women. Of these, 227 had symptoms of debilitating chronic fatigue. The patterns of symptoms differed from those in patients with CFS. An analysis of the relation between integrity of the implants and the symptoms could be carried out in 176 women, and 74% of these latter women reported ruptured implants. Significantly more women with ruptured implants than those with intact implants had debilitating chronic fatigue (75% vs 51%), postexertional malaise > 24 h (77% vs 51%), impaired short term memory (58% vs 38%), and multi-joint pain (77% vs 60%).

CONCLUSION: Women with silicone breast implants often report severe pain and chronic fatigue. Rupture of the implant is associated with an increase in symptoms of pain and chronic fatigue.

Comment in:

Where there’s smoke there’s fire: the silicone breast implant controversy continues to flicker: a new disease that needs to be defined. [J Rheumatol. 2003]

Breast implant related disease. [J Rheumatol. 2004]

 

Source: Vermeulen RC, Scholte HR. Rupture of silicone gel breast implants and symptoms of pain and fatigue. J Rheumatol. 2003 Oct;30(10):2263-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14528527

 

Mycoplasma blood infection in chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia syndromes

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) are characterised by a lack of consistent laboratory and clinical abnormalities. Although they are distinguishable as separate syndromes based on established criteria, a great number of patients are diagnosed with both.

In studies using polymerase chain reaction methods, mycoplasma blood infection has been detected in about 50% of patients with CFS and/or FMS, including patients with Gulf War illnesses and symptoms that overlap with one or both syndromes. Such infection is detected in only about 10% of healthy individuals, significantly less than in patients.

Most patients with CFS/FMS who have mycoplasma infection appear to recover and reach their pre-illness state after long-term antibiotic therapy with doxycycline, and the infection can not be detected after recovery. By means of causation and therapy, mycoplasma blood infection may permit a further subclassification of CFS and FMS.

It is not clear whether mycoplasmas are associated with CFS/FMS as causal agents, cofactors, or opportunistic infections in patients with immune disturbances. Whether mycoplasma infection can be detected in about 50% of all patient populations with CFS and/or FMS is yet to be determined.

 

Source: Endresen GK. Mycoplasma blood infection in chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia syndromes. Rheumatol Int. 2003 Sep;23(5):211-5. Epub 2003 Jul 16. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12879275

 

Chronic diffuse musculoskeletal pain, fibromyalgia and co-morbid unexplained clinical conditions

Abstract:

This chapter reviews our current knowledge on the presence of overlapping syndromes in one form of chronic diffuse pain, fibromyalgia. Patients with fibromyalgia often present with signs and symptoms of other unexplained clinical conditions, including chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, temporomandibular disorders, and multiple chemical sensitivities. The high prevalence, impact on function and opportunities for treatment underscore the need for clinicians and researchers to screen routinely for co-morbid unexplained clinical conditions among persons with fibromyalgia. We, therefore, describe a simple approach to screening for such conditions in accordance with published criteria. Interventions should directly address both fibromyalgia symptoms and co-morbid unexplained clinical conditions, as well as the multiple factors that propagate pain, fatigue and limitations in function.

 

Source: Aaron LA, Buchwald D. Chronic diffuse musculoskeletal pain, fibromyalgia and co-morbid unexplained clinical conditions. Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol. 2003 Aug;17(4):563-74. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12849712