Normal carnitine levels in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) complain of muscle pain and impaired exercise tolerance. Previous studies show that this is due to systemic carnitine deficiency. We investigated the hypothesis that carnitine deficiency plays an important role in CFS in female CFS patients and compared their results with neighbourhood controls.

METHODS: The level of total carnitine, free carnitine, acylcarnitine and carnitine esters were measured in 25 female CFS patients and 25 healthy matched neighbourhood controls in a blinded fashion.

RESULTS: The previously reported decreased level of acylcarnitine in CFS patients was not confirmed. There were also no significant differences in levels of total carnitine, free carnitine and 20 carnitine esters between CFS patients and controls.

CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrates that serum carnitine deficiency does not contribute to or causes the symptoms in many CFS patients.

 

Source: Soetekouw PM, Wevers RA, Vreken P, Elving LD, Janssen AJ, van der Veen Y, Bleijenberg G, van der Meer JW. Normal carnitine levels in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Neth J Med. 2000 Jul;57(1):20-4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10862998

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: a matter of enzyme deficiencies?

Abstract:

The etiology of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) remains an enigma. But literature concerning chronic fatigue which does not focus on CFS points to all sorts of enzyme deficiencies as possible causes. The deficiencies are probably dismissed as causes of CFS because other characteristic symptoms are lacking in CFS patients. But these symptoms are often also lacking in patients with a deficiency. Symptom patterns in enzyme deficiencies are extremely variable. Therefore, patients with CFS should be screened systematically for enzyme deficiencies.

Copyright 2000 Harcourt Publishers Ltd.

 

Source: van der Steen WJ. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a matter of enzyme deficiencies? Med Hypotheses. 2000 May;54(5):853-4. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10859701

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: gender differences in the search for legitimacy

Abstract:

This study employs qualitative research methods to describe and compare the experiences of men and women with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), focusing on respondents’ self-perceived illness experience and relationship with medical practitioners. Data were collected from 59 respondents (18 male, 41 female) in telephone interviews using an open-ended focus interview schedule. While respondents explained the causes of the disease in ways that were largely gender appropriate, they did not experience the disease itself in gender different ways. The evidence of the study points to a clear dichotomy between ways in which men and women experience the disease and differences in the ways in which they are treated by the medical profession.

 

Source: Clarke JN. Chronic fatigue syndrome: gender differences in the search for legitimacy. Aust N Z J Ment Health Nurs. 1999 Dec;8(4):123-33. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10855087

 

Aspects of occupational disability in psychosomatic disorders

Abstract:

In 1997, 30% of the persons going into early retirement because of occupational disability and received pensions were psychosomatically ill. An additional large number of retirees suffered from untreatable pain such as chronic low back pain, some of them might as well have a chronic somatoform pain disorder. The article describes frequent psychosomatic diseases like somatization disorder, fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome with respect to their pathophysiology and psychological aspects as well as therapeutic advancements. It is postulated that an interdisciplinary access to these patients early in the course of their illness involving both somatic medical and psychiatric competence is the most promising means to tackle this enormous medical and health protection problem.

 

Source: Huber M. Aspects of occupational disability in psychosomatic disorders. Versicherungsmedizin. 2000 Jun 1;52(2):66-75. [Article in German] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10853374

 

Follicular phase hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis function in women with fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: Fibromyalgia (FM) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) are clinically overlapping stress associated disorders. Neuroendocrine perturbations have been noted in both syndromes, and they are more common in women, suggesting abnormalities of gonadal steroid hormones. We tested the hypothesis that women with FM and CFS manifest abnormalities of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) hormonal axis.

METHODS: We examined the secretory characteristics of estradiol, progesterone, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), and luteinizing hormone (LH), including a detailed analysis of LH in premenopausal women with FM (n = 9) or CFS (n = 8) during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle compared to matched healthy controls. Blood was collected from an indwelling intravenous catheter every 10 min. over a 12 h period. LH was assayed from every sample; pulses of LH were identified by a pulse-detection program. FSH and progesterone were assayed from a pool of hourly samples for the 12 h period and estradiol from samples pooled over four 3 h time periods.

RESULTS: There were no significant differences in FSH, progesterone, or estradiol levels in patients versus controls. There were no significant differences in pulsatile secretion of LH.

CONCLUSION: There is no indication of abnormal gonadotropin secretion or gonadal steroid levels in this small, but systematic, study of HPG axis function in patients with FM and CFS.

 

Source: Korszun A, Young EA, Engleberg NC, Masterson L, Dawson EC, Spindler K, McClure LA, Brown MB, Crofford LJ. Follicular phase hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis function in women with fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. J Rheumatol. 2000 Jun;27(6):1526-30. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10852283

 

Significant other responses are associated with fatigue and functional status among patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: The predictive power of partners’ responses to illness behavior for illness outcomes was investigated among couples in which one person had chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

METHODS: One hundred nineteen participants who met case-definition criteria for CFS and were living with a significant other (SO) completed self-report measures of relationship satisfaction, responses of their SO to fatigue symptoms, and outcome measures of fatigue and functional status.

RESULTS: The results indicated that more frequent solicitous SO responses to illness behavior were predictive of greater fatigue-related severity and bodily pain. Solicitous SO responses to fatigue behavior were particularly influential in the context of a satisfactory relationship. In highly satisfactory relationships, solicitous SO responses were associated with significantly greater fatigue severity and fatigue-related disability than in relationships characterized by low or average satisfaction.

CONCLUSIONS: Solicitous SO responses to CFS-related symptoms are associated with poorer patient outcomes, especially in the context of a satisfactory intimate relationship. Because of the cross-sectional nature of the study, the direction of effects cannot be interpreted unambiguously. SOs may be inadvertently positively reinforcing illness-related behavior: Solicitous partners may help the patient more with tasks of daily living, thereby decreasing the patient’s activity level, which may lead to deconditioning and disability. Alternatively, patients with more severe symptoms and disability may present more opportunities for concerned SO responses, which again may be heightened in the context of a caring, satisfactory relationship. In either case, the results suggest that additional research on the role of solicitous SO responses is warranted.

 

Source: Schmaling KB, Smith WR, Buchwald DS. Significant other responses are associated with fatigue and functional status among patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Psychosom Med. 2000 May-Jun;62(3):444-50. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10845358

 

Nighttime sleep and daytime functioning (sleepiness and fatigue) in less well-defined chronic rheumatic diseases with particular reference to the ‘alpha-delta NREM sleep anomaly’

Abstract:

For the past 25 years, the ‘alpha-delta NREM sleep abnormality’ has been used by some as a defining or legitimizing marker for poorly defined rheumatic diseases such as fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome. Comprehensive review of the literature reveals no support for such a conclusion. Most studies involve small numbers of patients. The lack of control subjects, non-standardized recording techniques, and confusion between tonic and phasic alpha frequency activity patterns make comparison difficult.

There is much evidence that this sleep EEG pattern is not only non-specific, but may actually reflect a sleep maintaining process. The ‘sleep fragmentation’ theory of the complaint of non-restorative sleep in this patient population is invalidated by the fact that conditions characterized by severe sleep fragmentation, such as obstructive sleep apnea, are not associated with musculoskeletal symtoms. It is difficult to attribute musculoskeletal symptoms to disorders of sleep in view of the fact that the only organ of the body known to benefit from sleep, or to be adversely affected by lack of sleep, is the brain. It is concluded that fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome are associated with subjective sleep complaints, but do not represent sleep disorders.

 

Source: Mahowald ML, Mahowald MW. Nighttime sleep and daytime functioning (sleepiness and fatigue) in less well-defined chronic rheumatic diseases with particular reference to the ‘alpha-delta NREM sleep anomaly’. Sleep Med. 2000 Jul 1;1(3):195-207. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10828430

 

The difference in patterns of motor and cognitive function in chronic fatigue syndrome and severe depressive illness

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and major depressive disorder (MDD) share many symptoms and aetiological factors but may have different neurobiological underpinnings. We wished to determine the profile of the biological variables disturbed in CFS and MDD, and identify any critical factors that differentiate the disorders.

METHODS: Thirty patients with CFS, 20 with MDD and 15 healthy controls matched group-wise for age and sex were recruited. Subjects were given a detailed battery of motor and cognitive tests, including measures of psychomotor speed, memory and maximal voluntary muscle contraction in both the morning and evening that were balanced to avoid order effects.

RESULTS: CFS patients generally performed worse on cognitive tests than healthy controls, but better than patients with MDD. Both patient groups had markedly impaired motor function compared with healthy controls. MDD subjects showed a significantly greater diurnal improvement in maximal voluntary contraction than healthy controls.

CONCLUSIONS: Patients with CFS and MDD show similarly substantial motor impairment, but cognitive deficits are generally more marked in MDD. Diurnal changes in some functions in MDD may differentiate the disorder from CFS.

 

Source: Lawrie SM, MacHale SM, Cavanagh JT, O’Carroll RE, Goodwin GM. The difference in patterns of motor and cognitive function in chronic fatigue syndrome and severe depressive illness. Psychol Med. 2000 Mar;30(2):433-42. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10824663

 

Demonstration of borna disease virus nucleic acid in a patient with chronic fatigue syndrome

Comment on: Borna disease virus in human brains with a rare form of hippocampal degeneration but not in brains of patients with common neuropsychiatric disorders. [J Infect Dis. 1999]

 

To the Editor

Czygan et al. [1]reported the detection of Borna disease virus (BDV) nucleic acid in 3 cases of a rare form of hippocampal degeneration, whereas the brains of patients with other neuropsychiatric disorders tested negative for BDV. Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is another, more frequently diagnosed neuropsychiatric disease that is associated with BDV infection. However, the published findings are highly controversial. Nakaya et al. [2, 3] and Kitani et al. [4] showed both BDV-specific antibodies and RNA in a high percentage of Japanese patients with CFS. Bode et al. [5]isolated BDV from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of an American patient with CFS; however, in an earlier publication, Bode et al. [6], as well as Evengård et al. [7] and Yamaguchi et al. [8] in recent publications, did not find serologie evidence for BDV in patients with CFS. A possible explanation for the controversial results is that the term “chronic fatigue syndrome” probably includes several similar clinical conditions that may have different etiologies. In the study by Czygan et al. [1], brain tissue samples from patients who had CFS were not included. Unfortunately, none of the BDV sequences of the CFS cases mentioned above are available in the GenBank database.

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/181/5/1860.long

 

Source: Nowotny N, Kolodziejek J. Demonstration of borna disease virus nucleic acid in a patient with chronic fatigue syndrome. J Infect Dis. 2000 May;181(5):1860-2. http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/181/5/1860.long (Full article)

 

Cognitive behaviour therapy for adults with chronic fatigue syndrome

Update in: Cognitive behaviour therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome in adults. [Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008]

 

Abstract:

OBJECTIVES: 1. To systematically review all randomised controlled trials of cognitive-behaviour therapy (CBT) for adults with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS); 2. To test the hypothesis that CBT is more effective than orthodox medical management or other interventions in adults with CFS.

SEARCH STRATEGY: 1. Electronic searching of bibliographic databases, including Medline, PsycLIT, Biological Abstracts, Embase, SIGLE, Index to Theses, Index to Scientific and Technical Proceedings, and Science Citation Index, using multiple search terms in order to perform a highly sensitive search. 2. Electronic searching of the Trials Register of the Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis group. 3. Citation lists of relevant studies and reviews were perused for other relevant trials. 4. Contact with the principal authors of relevant studies, and with researchers in the field.

SELECTION CRITERIA: All randomised controlled trials were included in which – adult patients with CFS; – received CBT or a control intervention, being either orthodox medical management or another intervention; – and whose outcomes were assessed in an appropriate way. CBT could be either type ‘A’ (encouraging return to ‘normal’ levels of rest and activity) or type ‘B’ (encouraging rest and activity which were within levels imposed by the disorder).’

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: The two reviewers worked independently throughout the selection of trials and data extraction, comparing findings only when there was disagreement. Relevant trials were allocated to one of three quality categories. Full data extraction, using a standardised data extraction sheet, was performed on studies which were of high or moderate quality. Trials of low quality were excluded from the review. The comparisons made to test the review hypothesis were of type ‘A’ CBT versus other intervention(s), and of type ‘B’ CBT versus other intervention(s). Functional outcome was used as the main outcome for comparison, but other appropriate outcomes were compared where possible. Results were synthesised using the Review Manager software. For dichotomous data, the odds ratio was calculated for each study. For continuous data, effect sizes were obtained and the standardised mean difference, with 95% confidence intervals, was calculated.

MAIN RESULTS: Only three relevant trials of adequate quality were found. These trials demonstrated that CBT significantly benefits physical functioning in adult out-patients with CFS when compared to orthodox medical management or relaxation. It is necessary to treat about two patients to prevent one additional unsatisfactory physical outcome about six months after treatment end. CBT appeared highly acceptable to the patients in these trials. There is no satisfactory evidence for the effectiveness of CBT in patients with the milder forms of CFS found in primary care or in patients who are so disabled that they are unable to attend out-patients. Additionally, there is no satisfactory evidence for the effectiveness of group CBT.

REVIEWER’S CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive behaviour therapy appears to be an effective and acceptable treatment for adult out-patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. CFS is a common and disabling disorder. Its sufferers deserve the medical profession to be more aware of the potential of this therapy to bring lasting functional benefit, and health service managers to increase its availability. Further research is needed in this important area. Trials should conform to accepted standards of reporting and methodology. The effectiveness of CBT in more and less severely disabled patients than those usually seen in out-patient clinics needs to be assessed. Trials of group CBT and in-patient CBT compared to orthodox medical management, and of CBT compared to graded activity alone, also need to be conducted.

 

Source: Price JR, Couper J. Cognitive behaviour therapy for adults with chronic fatigue syndrome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2000;(2):CD001027. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10796733