Somatization, illness attribution and the sociocultural psychiatry of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

In addition to epidemiological and neurobiological perspectives on the relationship between chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and psychiatric disorders there has been increasing interest in the role of cognitive-behavioural, psychological, psychodynamic and social factors in the psychiatric aspects of this syndrome. These factors may be important in the initiation and/or maintenance of CFS and play important roles in the misdiagnosis of primary psychopathology as CFS. They may be important targets for intervention and treatment.

This paper examines the relevance of the following issues for better understanding the relationship between CFS and the results of psychiatric studies: (1) the concepts of somatization and abnormal illness behaviour; (2) the role of patients’ illness attributions; (3) psychological and psychodynamic constructs such as depressive vulnerability occurring in individuals dependent upon achievement for the maintenance of self-esteem and euthymic mood, perfectionism, and helplessness; (4) the role of personality characteristics and styles; (5) the potential iatrogenic role of the health care system in producing disability in individuals with a diagnosis of CFS; (6) the role of the media and other sociocultural forces in the patient’s choice of the CFS label; and (7) the impact of the CFS label on the patient. The importance of differentiating between initiating and maintaining or perpetuating factors is emphasized.

 

Source: Abbey SE. Somatization, illness attribution and the sociocultural psychiatry of chronic fatigue syndrome. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:238-52; discussion 252-61. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491101

 

Chronic fatigue and chronic fatigue syndrome: clinical epidemiology and aetiological classification

Abstract:

To determine the medical and psychiatric diagnoses that have an aetiological role in chronic fatigue we conducted a prospective study of 405 (65% women) patients who presented for evaluation with this chief complaint to an academic medical centre.

The average age was 38.1 years and the average duration of fatigue at entry in the study was 6.9 years. All patients were given comprehensive physical and laboratory evaluations and were administered a highly structured psychiatric interview. Psychiatric diagnoses explaining the chronic fatigue were identified in 74% of patients and physical disorders were diagnosed in 7% of patients.

The most common psychiatric conditions in this series were major depression, diagnosed in 58% of patients, panic disorder, diagnosed in 14% of patients, and somatization disorder, diagnosed in 10% of patients. Primary sleep disorders, diagnosed in 2% patients, and chronic infections, confirmed in 1.6% patients, explained the majority of cases whose chronic fatigue was attributed to a physical disorder.

Thirty per cent of patients met the criteria used to define the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Compared with age- and gender-matched control subjects with chronic fatigue, CFS patients had a similarly high prevalence of current psychiatric disorders (78% versus 82%), but were significantly more likely to have somatization disorder (28% versus 5%) and to attribute their illness to a viral infection (70% versus 33%).

We conclude that most patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue, including those exhibiting the features of CFS, suffer from standard mood, anxiety and/or somatoform disorders. Careful research is still needed to determine whether CFS is a distinct entity or a variant of these psychiatric illness.

 

Source: Manu P, Lane TJ, Matthews DA. Chronic fatigue and chronic fatigue syndrome: clinical epidemiology and aetiological classification. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:23-31; discussion 31-42. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491100

 

The neuropsychiatry of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

This paper explores the relationship between chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and psychiatric disorder, with special reference to neuropsychiatry, Topics reviewed include (1) epidemiological evidence of central disorder in CFS; (2) evidence from longitudinal studies of an interaction between vulnerability to CFS and psychiatric disorder; and (3) evidence from neuroimaging, neuropsychology, neurophysiology and neuroendocrinology of disordered CNS function in CFS. The most impressive evidence of CNS disturbance comes from neuroendocrinological studies, which suggest a role of hypothalamic disorder as a final common pathway for CFS. It is concluded that the equal and opposite tendencies of psychiatry to be ‘brainless’ and neurology to be ‘mindless’ have led to needless controversy over the nature of CFS. Now that the contributions of psychiatric disorder to CFS, and of neurobiological dysfunction to psychiatric disorder, are both established, it will be possible to make real advances in understanding the nature of CFS.

 

Source: Wessely S. The neuropsychiatry of chronic fatigue syndrome. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:212-29; discussion 229-37. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491099

 

Immunity and the pathophysiology of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The pathophysiology of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) remains unknown. The syndrome often follows a recognized or presumed infection and the disorder may therefore result from a disordered immune response to a precipitating infection or antigenic challenge.

Abnormalities of both humoral and cellular immunity have been demonstrated in a substantial proportion of patients with CFS. The most consistent findings are of impaired lymphocyte responses to mitogen and reduced natural killer cell cytotoxicity. Cutaneous anergy and immunoglobulin G subclass deficiencies have also been found.

Further studies are needed examining cytokine levels in serum and cerebrospinal fluid, and cytokine production in vitro in patients with CFS. Interpretation of the findings of published studies of immunity is limited by probable heterogeneity in the patient groups studied, and by the lack of standardization and reproducibility in the assays used.

The pattern of abnormalities reported in immunological testing in patients with CFS is consistent with the changes seen during the resolving phases of acute viral infection. These data provide circumstantial support for the hypothesis that CFS results from a disordered immune response to an infection. Longitudinal studies of immunity in patients developing CFS after defined infectious illnesses will provide the best means of further examining this hypothesis.

 

Source: Lloyd AR, Wakefield D, Hickie I. Immunity and the pathophysiology of chronic fatigue syndrome. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:176-87; discussion 187-92. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491097

 

Muscle histopathology and physiology in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is characterized by fatigue at rest which is made worse by exercise. Previous biopsy studies on small numbers of CFS patients have shown a range of morphological changes to which have been attributed fatigue and myalgia.

We have now studied 108 patients with CFS or muscle pain and 22 normal volunteers by light and electron microscopy. There was no consistent correlation between symptoms and changes in fibre type prevalence, fibre size, degenerative or regenerative features, glycogen depletion, or mitochondrial abnormalities. Physiological contractile properties of quadriceps (maximal isometric force generation, frequency: force characteristics and relaxation rate) were also examined before and for up to 48 hours after a symptom-limited incremental cycle ergometer exercise test in 12 CFS patients and 12 normal volunteers.

Voluntary and stimulated force characteristics were normal at rest and during recovery. Exercise duration was similar in the two groups although CFS patients had higher perceived exertion scores in relation to heart rate during exercise, indicating a reduced effort sensation threshold. On physiological and pathological grounds it is clear that CFS is not a myopathy. Psychological/psychiatric factors appear to be of greater importance in this condition.

 

Source: Edwards RH1, Gibson H, Clague JE, Helliwell T. Muscle histopathology and physiology in chronic fatigue syndrome. Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:102-17; discussion 117-31. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8491096

 

Hypothesis: the nasal fatigue reflex

Abstract:

Natural selection results in adaptations. I suggest that unexplained fatigue may be an adaptive response to nasal impairment.

For macrosmatic animals, intact olfaction is necessary to detect predators. In such animals, any reflex (e.g., fatigue) triggered by nasal dysfunction that limited exposure would offer great survival advantage. The “fatigued” animal would remain in its protected environment, unexposed to hungry carnivores, while the nose healed.

In humans, clinical syndromes associated with unexplained fatigue (chronic fatigue syndrome, tension fatigue syndrome, allergic fatigue, neurasthenia, etc.) are characterized by symptoms that, in part, are nasal in origin.

The older medical literature does describe the resolution of fatigue in neurasthenia after nasal treatments. Nasal reflexes in animals do cause significant systemic effects, including an inhibition of muscle action potentials that is, perhaps, analogous to the “heavy-limbed” sensation of those with fatigue.

Furthermore, reflexes similar to the one proposed do exist in humans: the diving reflex presumably served our amphibian ancestors well as an oxygen conserving technique with submersion, but serves no known useful function now. Other human nasopharyngeal reflexes with profound cardiovascular and systemic effects are well described but only occasionally studied. The proposed nasal fatigue reflex should be examined as a possible ancient adaptive response to nasal malfunction.

 

Source: Chester AC. Hypothesis: the nasal fatigue reflex. Integr Physiol Behav Sci. 1993 Jan-Mar;28(1):76-83. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8476744

 

Development of a fatigue scale

Abstract:

A self-rating scale was developed to measure the severity of fatigue. Two-hundred and seventy-four new registrations on a general practice list completed a 14-item fatigue scale. In addition, 100 consecutive attenders to a general practice completed the fatigue scale and the fatigue item of the revised Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS-R). These were compared by the application of Relative Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis. Tests of internal consistency and principal components analyses were performed on both sets of data. The scale was found to be both reliable and valid. There was a high degree of internal consistency, and the principal components analysis supported the notion of a two-factor solution (physical and mental fatigue). The validation coefficients for the fatigue scale, using an arbitrary cut off score of 3/4 and the item on the CIS-R were: sensitivity 75.5 and specificity 74.5.

 

Source: Chalder T, Berelowitz G, Pawlikowska T, Watts L, Wessely S, Wright D, Wallace EP. Development of a fatigue scale. J Psychosom Res. 1993;37(2):147-53. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8463991

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: influence of histamine, hormones and electrolytes

Abstract:

The chronic fatigue syndrome is poorly understood. We believe the underlying causes in many atopics and women are a persistent infection and hypersensitivity to the immune-suppressive effects of histamine and certain pathogens.

We believe much of the symptomatology can be explained by all four types of hypersensitivity (Gell and Coombs classification) in reaction to a pathogen, electrolyte disturbances which include sometimes permanent changes in cell membranes’ ability to pass electrolytes, sometimes permanent biochemical changes in mitochondrial function, and disturbances of insulin and T3-thyroid hormone functions. We also explain in detail what ‘fatigue’ means for these patients. We present evidence from the medical literature for the plausibility of our hypotheses.

 

Source: Dechene L. Chronic fatigue syndrome: influence of histamine, hormones and electrolytes. Med Hypotheses. 1993 Jan;40(1):55-60. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8455468

 

A four-year follow-up study in fibromyalgia. Relationship to chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The primary objectives of this study were to examine to what extent fibromyalgia patients later on developed presumpted causative somatic diseases and to examine symptoms and muscle strength some years after the diagnosis of fibromyalgia was established. A secondary objective was to describe the overlap between fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome.

Only in two of 91 the muscle pain was found to be caused by another somatic disease during the median 4 year follow-up period. In one of the 83 attending subjects a somatic disease associated with muscle symptoms was established at the follow-up visit. 60 out of 83 reported increased pain, 8 reported improvement of pain. The 83 subjects showed no significant fall in muscle strength during the follow-up period. The majority reported severe fatigue but only one fifth fulfilled the proposed chronic fatigue syndrome criteria.

 

Source: Nørregaard J, Bülow PM, Prescott E, Jacobsen S, Danneskiold-Samsøe B. A four-year follow-up study in fibromyalgia. Relationship to chronic fatigue syndrome. Scand J Rheumatol. 1993;22(1):35-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8434245

 

Taking exception to chronic fatigue syndrome prevalence findings by Price, et al.

Comment on: Estimating the prevalence of chronic fatigue syndrome and associated symptoms in the community. [Public Health Rep. 1992]

 

We would like to address some serious methodological issues in the article, “Estimating the Prevalence of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Associated Symptoms in the Community,” by Rumi K. Price, et al., published in the September-October issue of Public Health Reports. We believe that because of the deficiencies in the design of this research, the authors’ conclusions are totally illogical and invalid.

In this article, the authors conclude that Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), as defined by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Diagnostic Criteria, might be “quite rare” in the general population, as only 1 of 13,538 individuals studied was deemed to have CFS. The official CDC Diagnostic Criteria, however, were not utilized to diagnose cases of CFS. Instead, the researchers reviewed interview questionnaire data collected between 1981 and 1984 for a purpose unrelated to diagnosing CFS. In fact, the CDC Diagnostic Criteria were not formulated and published until 1988.

You can read the rest of this comment as well as the rely from the authors here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1403345/pdf/pubhealthrep00069-0137c.pdf

 

Source: Robin R, Lipkin DM, Hume GW. Taking exception to chronic fatigue syndrome prevalence findings by Price, et al. Public Health Rep. 1993 Jan-Feb;108(1):135-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1403345/