Chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The major and minor diagnostic criteria of the chronic fatigue syndrome are described. The stages of the differential diagnosis, the diagnostic strategies and the controversies, while insisting on certain sleeping disorders are discussed. The cause of the syndrome may be a viral infection, and an anxious-depressive state may increase somatic complaints. Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome did not demonstrate a specific response to therapy. Spontaneous remission after a few years is a typical feature of this syndrome.

 

Source: Sternon J, Decaux G, Hoffmann G. Chronic fatigue syndrome. Rev Med Brux. 1994 Sep-Oct;15(5):311-5. [Article in French] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7984848

 

The chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

CFIDS (chronic fatigue and immune disfunction syndrome) is also known as CFS (chronic fatigue syndrome), CEBV (chronic Epstein-Barr virus), M.E. (myalgic encephalomyelitis), yuppie flu and by other names.

It is a complex illness characterized by incapacitating fatigue (experienced as exhaustion and extremely poor stamina), neurological problems and a constellation of symptoms that can resemble many disorders, including; mononucleosis, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, AIDS-related complex (ARC) and autoimmune diseases such as lupus. These symptoms tend to wax and wane, but any often severely debilitating and may last for many months or years. All sections of the population (including children) are at risk, but women under 45 seem to be most susceptible.

The investigators suggest that CFIDS results from dysfunction of the immune system. The exact nature of this dysfunction is not yet well defined, but it can generally be viewed as an unregulated or overactive state which is responsible for most of the symptoms. There is also evidence of some immune suppression in CFIDS. None of the treatments is consistently satisfactory, but some may be helpful: psychotherapy, physiotherapy, exercise programs, acupunctures, small doses of antidepressants, etc.

 

Source: Artsimovich NG, Chugunov VS, Kornev AV, Ivanova TM, Chugunov AV, Oprishchenko MA. The chronic fatigue syndrome. Zh Nevrol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova. 1994;94(5):47-50. [Article in Russian] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7900453

 

The chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) including myalgic encephalomyelitis and the postviral syndrome is a term used today to describe a not fully recognized disease characterized primarily by chronic or recurrent debilitating fatigue and various combinations of neuromuscular and neuropsychological symptoms. The term CFS has been introduced and defined by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta. Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms in medicine, but CFS as defined by CDC has appeared to be quite rare in the general population. Researchers have suggested that the syndrome is a heterogenous immunologic disorder that follows viral infection, but despite numerous studies on the subject the etiologic factor of the syndrome is unknown. CFS is a controversial diagnosis. In a very high percentage of patients with the CFS depression, phobias or anxiety disorders have frequently preceded the onset of the chronic fatigue. There are many overlapping symptoms between CFS and major depression. Some clinicians suggest that it is not obvious that CFS can be distinguished from neurasthenia.

 

Source: Białyszewski A. [The chronic fatigue syndrome]. Psychiatr Pol. 1993 Nov-Dec;27(6):601-11 [Article in Polish] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8134494

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome

Comment on: The chronic fatigue syndrome: what do we know? [BMJ. 1993]

 

Editor,-In P K Thomas’s succinct review of chronic fatigue syndrome, the extensive morbidity, misery, and misinformation that exists around this subject is not stated. The present situation is also not helped by the majority of medical practitioners having no education in, and little experience of, managing this common disorder.

Irrespective of the cause or the emotional response this syndrome produces in professionals, it creates considerable disability in our communities. The overall prevalence of people who suffer with intrusive fatigue is estimated at 150 000. Many of these (as yet unmeasured) are debilitated to such an extent that they are unable to work and are dependent on carers. It is interesting to note that within the NHS there is at the moment no single unit dedicated or equipped to assess, treat, and provide long term support for such patients. Limited facilities have been provided in beds that are earmarked for other disorders.

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1678593/pdf/bmj00032-0058b.pdf

 

Source: Cox DL, Findley LJ. Chronic fatigue syndrome. BMJ. 1993 Jul 31;307(6899):328. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1678593/

 

The chronic fatigue syndrome: what do we know?

Abnormally persistent or recurrent fatigue is a feature of many disorders. Recently, particular attention has been devoted to people whose life is dominated by protracted and disabling fatigue. Such cases are now usually categorised as the chronic fatigue syndrome, the postviral fatigue syndrome, or myalgic encephalomyelitis. Two recent publications bring together current ideas on the topic.

The historical background is important. Although the chronic fatigue syndrome has been advanced as a malaise of the latter part of this century, such cases are not a new phenomenon: they were particularly common during the latter part of the last century. The New York physician George Beard applied the label “neurasthenia” to them although the term was more widely used. After becoming an exceedingly common diagnosis it waned at the time of the first world war.

This first wave in the history of chronic fatigue was followed by a second wave, which can be dated to 1934. Nevertheless, cases of chronic fatigue did not simply disappear in the intervening period. The “effort syndrome” had a considerable vogue at that time. “Fibrositis,” a term introduced by Sir William Gowers in 1894 to designate the occurrence of diffuse muscle aching and pain without detectable explanation, evolved into “fibromyalgia.” This currently popular diagnosis has many overlapping features with the chronic fatigue syndrome, as did the effort syndrome.

You can read the rest of this article here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1677985/pdf/bmj00024-0007.pdf

 

Comment in:

Functional hypoglycaemia postulated as cause of chronic fatigue syndrome. [BMJ. 1993]

Chronic fatigue syndrome. [BMJ. 1993]

 

Source: Thomas PK. The chronic fatigue syndrome: what do we know? BMJ. 1993 Jun 12;306(6892):1557-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1677985/

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: a critical review

Abstract:

The term “chronic fatigue syndrome” (CFS) applies to a condition of unknown aetiology characterized clinically by an association of subjective symptoms, the most constant being an invalidating tiredness. The diagnostic criteria in current use do not permit to isolate an homogeneous subgroup among patients consulting for chronic asthenia.

In the present state of research no infectious or immunological cause has been demonstrated conclusively, although a persistent enterovirus or herpesvirus type 6 infection or a state of chronic immune activation seem to play a role in some cases. Patients who fulfill the criteria of CFS present with psychiatric overmorbidity, essentially depressive, and in 50% of the cases with the mental disorders preceding CFS. The various theoretical models linking CFS to psychopathology are discussed, and finally the syndrome is regarded as a social construction reproducing or renovating the neurasthenia of the late 19th century.

There is no specific treatment of CFS, but antidepressants, cognitive-behavioural therapy and perhaps certain immuno-modulators can be useful. The future lines of research should endeavour to isolate a subgroup of patients with prolonged asthenia after a recognized episode of infection and to identify the immunological, psychological and behavioral characteristics of this particular group as well as their reciprocal interactions.

 

Source: Cathébras P, Bouchou K, Charmion S, Rousset H. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a critical review. Rev Med Interne. 1993 Apr;14(4):233-42. [Article in French] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8378654

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome. A fresh look at an old problem

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), an organic disease of unexplained origin, affects about three people in 100,000. Symptoms last approximately 2 1/2 years, and most CFS patients return to normal health. Diagnosis of CFS is by exclusion. No single remedy has yet proven consistently beneficial. Family physicians can help by providing medical validation of disability to persons who might otherwise be seen as malingerers.

You can read the full article here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2379748/pdf/canfamphys00108-0118.pdf

 

Comment in: Disagreeing on how to treat CFS patients. [Can Fam Physician. 1993]

 

Source: McSherry J. Chronic fatigue syndrome. A fresh look at an old problem. Can Fam Physician. 1993 Feb;39:336-40. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2379748/

 

Society, mind and body in chronic fatigue syndrome: an anthropological view

Abstract:

An anthropological view of chronic fatigue syndrome places the study of illness in social context. Data from an interview study of 50 chronically fatigued patients demonstrate the relation of local social worlds–families, workplaces, communities–to the meaning and experience of illness.

Negative life events and difficulties, multiple commitments, and a hectic pace are among prominent themes in the subjects’ local worlds. These themes are reflected in: (1) attributions of illness onset to social sources, (2) the symbolism of the core complaint of fatigue, and (3) an illness-induced, positively valued lifestyle transformation suggesting the rejection of culturally prescribed ‘busyness’.

Dichotomous definitions of the relation of mind and body are shown to be part of culture, not Nature, in the paper’s second section. The ‘mind-body dichotomy’ and the differing values attached to physical and psychological disorders by a naturalistic scientific paradigm explain the delegitimizing experiences of sufferers, who find their illness dismissed as psychosomatic and therefore ‘not real’.

A conceptualization of chronic fatigue syndrome which links local social worlds to psychological distress, felt bodily sensation and biological changes is proposed. Collaborative teams of social scientists and medical researchers might fruitfully pursue aspects of social context in relation to psychiatric, immunological and viral dimensions of the illness.

 

Source: Ware NC. Society, mind and body in chronic fatigue syndrome: an anthropological view. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:62-73; discussion 73-82. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491108

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is defined by symptoms and diagnosed without any objective diagnostic tests. Risk factors for developing CFS may include infection, psychiatric disorders, and allergies. Modest dysfunction of multiple organ systems, including the immune, central nervous, endocrine, and muscular systems, have been identified in cases of CFS. Symptoms of various organic, psychiatric, and poorly understood disorders overlap those of CFS. There is no known cure for CFS; however, exercise, counseling, and medications may provide symptomatic relief.

 

Source: Klonoff DC. Chronic fatigue syndrome. Clin Infect Dis. 1992 Nov;15(5):812-23. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1445980

 

Symptoms, signs and laboratory findings in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

This review summarizes the symptoms, signs and laboratory abnormalities seen in 59 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), 2 patients with post-infectious CFS and in 26 patients with possible CFS whose illnesses fulfill the criteria proposed by the study group of the Ministry of Welfare, Japan.

The characteristic symptoms and signs of CFS are prolonged generalized fatigue following exercise, headache, neuropsychological symptoms, sleep disturbance and mild fever. In possible CFS patients, the frequency of mild fever, muscle weakness, myalgia and headache is low.

Our standard hematologic and laboratory tests revealed a few abnormality in patients with CFS. The characteristic abnormality in CFS patients is the low values of 17-Ketosteroid-Sulfates/creatinine in morning urine and the acylcarnitine deficiency. It seems likely that this deficiency of acylcarnitine induces an energy deficit in the skeletal muscle, resulting in general fatigue, myalgia, muscle weakness and postexertional malaise in CFS patients. Virologic studies revealed no evidence of retrovirus infection with HTLV-1, HTLV-2 and HIV, but the reactivation of HHV-6 infection was apparent.

 

Source: Kuratsune H, Yamaguti K, Hattori H, Tazawa H, Takahashi M, Yamanishi K, Kitani T. Symptoms, signs and laboratory findings in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Nihon Rinsho. 1992 Nov;50(11):2665-72. [Article in Japanese] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1337562