Use of depression rating scales in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the performance of three commonly used depression rating scales in a hospital sample of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

METHODS: Sixty-one patients with CDC criteria for CFS completed the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ), the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D) and the depression subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS-D). Current psychiatric status was assessed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. DISORDERS: Patient version (SCID-P). Receiver operating curves were drawn for each of the depression rating scales.

RESULTS: Thirty-one percent of the patients were depressed according to the SCID-P. Using the standard cut-offs, both GHQ and HAM-D overestimated the number of depressed patients, whilst the HADS-D underestimated the number. The receiver operating curves suggest that the optimum cut-offs for GHQ, HAM-D and HADS-D in this population are 7/8, 13/14 and 8/9, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: Standard cutoffs may not be appropriate when using depression rating scales in CFS patients in a tertiary care setting.

 

Source: Henderson M, Tannock C. Use of depression rating scales in chronic fatigue syndrome. J Psychosom Res. 2005 Sep;59(3):181-4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16198192

 

The relationships among coping styles and fatigue in an ethnically diverse sample

Abstract:

The present study focused on coping strategies among African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and idiopathic chronic fatigue (ICF). The coping strategies examined were measured by using the COPE Scales, which assess Seeking Emotional Social Support, Positive Reinterpretation and Growth, Acceptance, Denial, Turning to Religion, Behavioral Disengagement, and Focusing on and Venting Emotions. In addition, the four coping strategies specifically designed for people with CFS, including maintaining activity, accommodating to the illness, focusing on symptoms, and information-seeking, were used in this study. It was hypothesized that African Americans and Latinos in comparison to European Americans would be more likely to use religious coping, behavioral disengagement, and denial.

As predicted, African Americans were significantly more likely to turn to religion than European Americans, and Latinos and African Americans used denial significantly more often than European Americans. An additional finding was that focusing on symptoms was associated with greater fatigue and more physical disability among African Americans. Within the Latino sample, acceptance was related to greater fatigue and less physical disability, and greater optimism predicted less mental disability. Among European American participants, maintaining activity was related to less mental disability, whereas accommodating to the illness predicted more physical disability.

These results indicate that coping varies among various ethnic groups with CFS and ICF; however, denial is consistently related to less adaptive outcomes. Therefore, healthcare professionals should find ways to reduce patient use of denial and promote alternative strategies for managing life events.

 

Source: Njoku MG, Jason LA, Torres-Harding SR. The relationships among coping styles and fatigue in an ethnically diverse sample. Ethn Health. 2005 Nov;10(4):263-78 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16191727

 

Exercise and cognitive performance in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

PURPOSE: To determine the effect of submaximal steady-state exercise on cognitive performance in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) alone, CFS with comorbid fibromyalgia FM (CFS + FM), and sedentary healthy controls (CON).

METHODS: Twenty CFS-only patients, 19 CFS + FM, and 26 CON completed a battery of cognitive tests designed to assess speed of information processing, variability, and efficiency. Tests were performed at baseline, immediately before, and twice following 25 min of either cycle ergometry set at 40% of peak oxygen capacity or quiet rest.

RESULTS: There were no group differences in average percentage of peak oxygen consumption during exercise (CFS = 45%; CFS + FM = 47%; Control = 43%: P = 0.2). There were no significant effects of acute exercise on cognitive performance for any group. At baseline, one-way ANOVA indicated that CFS patients displayed deficits in speed of processing, performance variability, and task efficiency during several cognitive tests compared with healthy controls. However, the CFS + FM patients were not different than controls. Repeated measures ANOVA indicated that across all tests (pre- and postexercise) CFS, but not CFS + FM, were significantly less consistent (F2,59 = 3.7, P = 0.03) and less efficient (F2,59 = 4.6, P = 0.01) than controls.

CONCLUSION: CFS patients without comorbid FM exhibit subtle cognitive deficits in terms of speed, consistency, and efficiency that are not improved or exacerbated by light exercise. Importantly, our data suggest that CFS + FM patients do not exhibit cognitive deficits either pre- or postexercise. These results highlight the importance of disease heterogeneity in studies determining acute exercise and cognitive function in CFS.

 

Source: Cook DB, Nagelkirk PR, Peckerman A, Poluri A, Mores J, Natelson BH. Exercise and cognitive performance in chronic fatigue syndrome. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2005 Sep;37(9):1460-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16177595

 

Chronic fatigue in a population sample: definitions and heterogeneity

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Numerous nosological decisions are made when moving from the common human symptom of unusual fatigue to the rare chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). These decisions have infrequently been subjected to rigorous evaluation.

METHOD: We obtained telephone interview data on fatiguing symptoms from 31406 individuals twins in the Swedish Twin Registry aged 42-64 years; 5330 subjects who endorsed fatigue and possessed no exclusionary condition formed the analytic group. We evaluated the definition and classification of CFS-like illness using graphical methods, regression models, and latent class analysis.

RESULTS: Our results raise fundamental questions about the 1994 Centers for Disease Control criteria as (1) there was no empirical support for the requirement of four of eight cardinal CFS symptoms; (2) these eight symptoms were not equivalent in their capacity to predict fatigue; and (3) no combination of symptoms was markedly more heritable. Critically, latent class analysis identified a syndrome strongly resembling CFS-like illness.

CONCLUSIONS: Our data are consistent with the ‘existence’ of CFS-like illness although the dominant nosological approach captures population-level variation poorly. We suggest that studying a more parsimonious case definition – impairing chronic fatigue not due to a known cause – would represent a way forward.

 

Source: Sullivan PF, Pedersen NL, Jacks A, Evengård B. Chronic fatigue in a population sample: definitions and heterogeneity. Psychol Med. 2005 Sep;35(9):1337-48. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16168156

 

Twin analyses of chronic fatigue in a Swedish national sample

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Chronic fatigue has infrequently been studied in twins. Data from twin studies can inform clinical and research approaches to the management and etiology of human complex traits.

METHOD: The authors obtained telephone interview data on current chronic fatigue from 31406 individuals twins in the Swedish Twin Registry (aged 42-64 years, 75.68% response rate), from both members of 12407 pairs and from one member of 6592 pairs. Of the complete pairs, 3269 pairs were monozygotic, 9010 pairs dizygotic, and 128 pairs of unknown zygosity. Structural equation twin modeling was used to estimate the latent genetic architecture of varying definitions of fatiguing illness.

RESULTS: Estimates of additive genetic effects, shared environmental effects, and individual-specific environmental effects were similar in males and females. No definition of current fatiguing illness (ranging from any fatigue to CFS-like illness) was strikingly distinctive. Individual-specific effects were the predominant source of variation, followed by modest genetic influences. We could not exclude a small but conceptually important contribution of shared environmental effects.

CONCLUSIONS: Current fatiguing illness appears to be a complex trait resulting from both environmental and genetic sources of variation without pronounced differences by gender.

 

Source: Sullivan PF, Evengård B, Jacks A, Pedersen NL. Twin analyses of chronic fatigue in a Swedish national sample. Psychol Med. 2005 Sep;35(9):1327-36. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16168155

 

The epidemiology of chronic fatigue in the Swedish Twin Registry

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) remains an idiopathic and controversial entity.

METHOD: We screened 31405 individual members of the Swedish Twin Registry (aged 42-64 years) for the symptoms of fatiguing illness via a telephone questionnaire. We refined self-reported symptoms via data from several national registries and from physician review of all available medical records in order to approximate closely the dominant case definition of CFS.

FINDINGS: The 6-month prevalence of CFS-like illness was 2.36% (95% CI 2.19-2.53) and was markedly higher in women than men, odds ratio 3.92 (95% CI 3.24-4.72) with no significant association with age or years of education. There was a highly significant association with occupation that disappeared after accounting for gender.

INTERPRETATION: CFS-like illness may be more common that previously acknowledged. There is a marked increase in risk by gender. Previous reports that CFS is more prevalent in individuals in certain occupational categories were not confirmed and may have been due to confounding by gender.

 

Source: Evengård B, Jacks A, Pedersen NL, Sullivan PF. The epidemiology of chronic fatigue in the Swedish Twin Registry. Psychol Med. 2005 Sep;35(9):1317-26. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16168154

 

Gene expression profiling in the chronic fatigue syndrome

Fatigue is a symptom found in many conditions of disease and illness. Although, unfrequently recognized by the medical profession, it is often of major importance for the patients. Chronic fatigue was reported by 5.9% of the Swedish population in a large telephone-based interview with 31 406 individuals in the Swedish twin registry (STR) [1]. The fatigue had lasted for more than 6 months and caused impairment, e.g. >25% reduction of working capacity. When at least four of eight criteria included in the current definition of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) [2] was added 2.4% reported that they suffered from a CFS-like illness.

This costly condition is still an intriguing issue for researchers and clinicians, and ambiguities in the definition have recently been focused upon [3, 4]. An empirical test of the definition was performed with data from the STR where five subgroups were identified: ‘CFS-like’, ‘residual’, ‘rheumatic’, ‘depressive’ and ‘acute physical syndrome’ [5].

We wanted to identify genes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), which may play an important role in the pathogenesis and diagnostics of CFS, using microarray technology. PBMCs can serve as indicators of illness processes occurring in different parts of the human body. Patients with CFS from a clinic of infectious diseases at a university hospital were stratified according to the STR study findings [5] to sex, illness classification (ICD-10), illness onset type, illness duration and number of symptoms (Table 1).

You can read the rest of this article here: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2796.2005.01548.x/full

 

Source: Gräns H, Nilsson P, Evengard B. Gene expression profiling in the chronic fatigue syndrome. J Intern Med. 2005 Oct;258(4):388-90. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2796.2005.01548.x/full (Full article)

 

A preliminary epidemiological study and discussion on traditional Chinese medicine pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome in Hong Kong

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: Our purpose is to conduct an epidemiological study of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and its syndrome types and symptoms of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) among adults (20-50 years old) in Hong Kong, and to discuss the TCM pathogenesis.

METHODS: DESIGN: Cross-sectional questionnaire survey.

MEASURES: Demographic data, CDC (1994) CFS diagnostic criteria, Trudie Chalder fatigue scale, and China national standard for TCM syndrome types criteria.

SUBJECTS: Twenty to fifty years old adults by convenient sampling.

RESULTS: One thousand and thirteen subjects were successfully interviewed. Five hundred and eighty-five subjects (57.8%) had different levels of fatigue. Sixty-five subjects (6.4%) met CFS diagnostic criteria. In terms of TCM syndrome types, blood stasis due to qi deficiency had the highest prevalence (35.7%) among CFS. In the 54 symptoms investigated in total, the first eight symptoms in order of appearing rates were soreness of loins and weakness in knees, poor spirit, lassitude, pain, insomnia, forgetting, vessels blood stasis, vertigo and dazzle. The mostly appeared tongue figures were pale and corpulent or pale dim tongue proper, white and white greasy tongue coating, and the mostly appeared pulse figure was sunken-thin.

CONCLUSION: The point prevalence of CFS among adults of 20 to 50 years old was found to be 6.4%. The most prevalent TCM syndrome type was blood stasis due to qi deficiency. The TCM pathogenesis of CFS was deficiency of origin, mainly deficiency of qi and kidney, with excess of superficiality.

 

Source: Yiu YM, Qiu MY. A preliminary epidemiological study and discussion on traditional Chinese medicine pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome in Hong Kong. Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Xue Bao. 2005 Sep;3(5):359-62. [Article in Chinese] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16159567 View full article in Chinese here: http://www.jcimjournal.com/articles/publishArticles/pdf/200632947810378.pdf

 

Acupuncture and Chinese patent drugs for treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome

We have, in recent years, treated 84 cases of chronic fatigue syndrome with acupuncture therapy and Chinese patent drugs and obtained quite good clinical therapeutic effects. A report follows.

You can read the rest of this article here: http://www.journaltcm.com/modules/Journal/contents/stories/052/6.pdf

 

Source: Lijue Z. Acupuncture and Chinese patent drugs for treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome. J Tradit Chin Med. 2005 Jun;25(2):99-101. http://www.journaltcm.com/modules/Journal/contents/stories/052/6.pdf (Full article)

 

The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Activities and Participation Questionnaire (CFS-APQ): an overview

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is characterized by severe fatigue and a reduction in activity levels. The purpose of this study was to provide an overview of design, reliability, and validity of the CFS Activities and Participation Questionnaire (CFS-APQ).

The CFS-APQ was constructed based on a retrospective analysis of the Karnofsky Performance Status Questionnaire and the Activities of Daily Living Questionnaire (n = 141). In a reliability study of 34 participants the test-retest reliability coefficient of the CFS-APQ was 0.95. In two different studies, the Cronbach alpha coefficient for internal consistency varied between 0.87 (n = 88) and 0.94 (n = 47). The CFS-APQ was administered to 47 patients who listed 183 activities that had become difficult due to their chronic symptoms, and 157 (85.8%) answers matched the content of the CFS-APQ.

The outcome of a cross-sectional study (n = 88) studying the correlations between the Medical Outcomes Short Form 36 Health Status Survey subscale scores and the CFS-APQ supported the validity of the CFS-APQ. The CFS-APQ scores correlated with a behavioural assessment of the patients’ performance of activities encompassed by the questionnaire (r = 0.29-0.55; n = 63), and correlated with exercise capacity parameters (r = 0.26-0.39; n = 77) obtained during a maximal exercise capacity stress test. Finally, the CFS-APQ correlated with visual analogue scales for pain (r = 0.51) and fatigue (r = 0.50; n = 47).

It is concluded that the CFS-APQ generates reliable and valid data, and can be used as a clinical measure of disease severity in patients with CFS. Future studies should aim at examining the sensitivity of the CFS-APQ.

 

Source: Nijs J, Vaes P, De Meirleir K. The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Activities and Participation Questionnaire (CFS-APQ): an overview. Occup Ther Int. 2005;12(2):107-21. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16136868