Neuraesthenia revisited: ICD-10 and DSM-III-R psychiatric syndromes in chronic fatigue patients and comparison subjects

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Different definitions of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) have different psychiatric exclusion criteria and this affects the type and frequency of associated psychiatric morbidity found. The operational criteria for neuraesthenia in ICD-10 vary in this and other respects from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria for CFS. Neuraesthenia and associated psychiatric morbidity in CDC-defined CFS are evaluated.

METHOD: CFS subjects and controls were interviewed with the Schedule for the Clinical Assessment of Neuropsychiatry (SCAN). The computerised scoring program for SCAN (CATEGO5) facilitates the assignment of operational definitions according to DSM-III-R and ICD-10. Subjects were re-interviewed with SCAN an average of 11 months later. No specific treatments or interventions were given during this period.

RESULTS: The majority of subjects fulfilled ICD-10 operational criteria for neuraesthenia and had two and a half times the rate of psychiatric morbidity as the healthy comparison group according to the CATEGO5 Index of Definition (ID). Approximately 80% of subjects fulfilled both DSM-III-R and ICD-10 criteria for sleep disorders. There was a significant fall in the number of subjects fulfilling criteria for depression and anxiety disorders and a significant increase in the number of subjects with no diagnosis for DSM-III-R criteria over time. There were no significant changes over time for any diagnosis according to ICD-10 criteria or for overall levels of psychopathology as reflected in CATEGO5 ID levels.

CONCLUSIONS: The ICD-10 ‘neuraesthenia’ definition identifies almost all subjects with CDC-defined CFS. Fifty percent of CFS subjects also had depressive or anxiety disorders, some categories of which remit spontaneously over time.

 

Source: Farmer A, Jones I, Hillier J, Llewelyn M, Borysiewicz L, Smith A. Neuraesthenia revisited: ICD-10 and DSM-III-R psychiatric syndromes in chronic fatigue patients and comparison subjects. Br J Psychiatry. 1995 Oct;167(4):503-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8829720

 

Determination of observer-rated alpha activity during sleep

Abstract:

Patients suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) have been described as having alpha intrusion into sleep. In a separate study of the relationship between depression and CFS, we investigated the sleep of CFS patients.

We could not detect any observable alpha anomaly in our group of CFS patients. It is possible that there is a subgroup of CFS patients in whom no alpha anomaly is present. However, the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) montage used in our study was different to that employed by previous researchers.

This paper investigates the influence of electrode derivations on the outcome of observable alpha ratings. We compared simultaneous recordings of sleep EEG using three commonly employed montages.

Our results indicate that use of the mastoid reference (montage 1) results in the highest observer-related alpha. This may suggest that data regarding alpha intrusion should always be collected using montage 1.

However, there is a possibility that the mastoid electrode is not electrically silent and is contaminating the data of the referenced channels. The implications of these findings are discussed in relation to the validity of alpha intrusion measurement of CFS and fibromyalgia.

 

Source: Flanigan MJ, Morehouse RL, Shapiro CM. Determination of observer-rated alpha activity during sleep. Sleep. 1995 Oct;18(8):702-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8560138

 

Psychosocial correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome in adolescent girls

Abstract:

Behavior problems and family functioning were investigated in a sample of 10 adolescent girls with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), 10 matched healthy adolescent girls, and 10 adolescents with childhood cancer in remission.

Based on the adolescent girls’ reports, the CFS group had significantly higher scores than the cancer and healthy comparison adolescent girls on somatic complaints and also significantly higher scores than the cancer controls on internalizing symptoms and depression. Parent reports resulted in significantly higher scores in the CFS group than the adolescent girls from the healthy comparison groups on internalizing scores and somatic complaints. There were no significant differences on any family variables.

 

Source: Pelcovitz D, Septimus A, Friedman SB, Krilov LR, Mandel F, Kaplan S. Psychosocial correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome in adolescent girls. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1995 Oct;16(5):333-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8557833

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome (myalgic encephalopathy)

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome is associated with many misconceptions. In this review, we attempt to summarize various pathogenic hypotheses for this disease and discuss new lines of insight into causes and treatments of this baffling and most frustrating condition.

 

Source: Plioplys S, Plioplys AV. Chronic fatigue syndrome (myalgic encephalopathy). South Med J. 1995 Oct;88(10):993-1000. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7481975

The relationship between neurally mediated hypotension and the chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical symptoms and response evoked by upright tilt-table testing in healthy individuals and in a sample of those satisfying strict criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome.

DESIGN: Case-comparison study with mean (SD) follow-up of 24 (5) weeks.

SETTING: Tertiary care hospital.

PATIENTS AND OTHER PARTICIPANTS: A sample of 23 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (five men and 18 women; mean age, 34 years), each of whom fulfilled the strict diagnostic criteria of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was recruited from regional chronic fatigue support groups and from the investigators’ clinical practices. There were 14 healthy controls (four men and 10 women; mean age, 36 years).

INTERVENTIONS: Each subject completed a symptom questionnaire and underwent a three-stage upright tilt-table test (stage 1, 45 minutes at 70 degrees tilt; stage 2, 15 minutes at 70 degrees tilt with 1 to 2 micrograms/min of isoproterenol; and stage 3, 10 minutes at 70 degrees with 3 to 4 micrograms/min of isoproterenol). Patients were offered therapy with fludrocortisone, beta-adrenergic blocking agents, and disopyramide, alone or in combination, directed at neurally mediated hypotension.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Response to upright tilt and scores on symptom questionnaires prior to and during follow-up.

RESULTS: An abnormal response to upright tilt was observed in 22 of 23 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome vs four of 14 controls (P < .001). Seventy percent of chronic fatigue syndrome patients, but no controls, had an abnormal response during stage 1 (P < .001). Nine patients reported complete or nearly complete resolution of chronic fatigue syndrome symptoms after therapy directed at neurally mediated hypotension.

CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that chronic fatigue syndrome is associated with neurally mediated hypotension and that its symptoms may be improved in a subset of patients by therapy directed at this abnormal cardiovascular reflex.

Comment in:

Chronic fatigue syndrome and neurally mediated hypotension. [JAMA. 1996]

Orthostatic hypotension and chronic fatigue syndrome. [JAMA. 2001]

Chronic fatigue syndrome and neurally mediated hypotension. [JAMA. 1996]

Chronic fatigue syndrome and neurally mediated hypotension. [JAMA. 1996]

 

Source: Bou-Holaigah I, Rowe PC, Kan J, Calkins H. The relationship between neurally mediated hypotension and the chronic fatigue syndrome. JAMA. 1995 Sep 27;274(12):961-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7674527

 

Chronic fatigue syndrome: current perspectives on evaluation and management

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To describe clinical and laboratory guidelines for assessment and management of patients presenting with chronic fatigue syndrome(CFS).

DATA SOURCES: Relevant international consensus diagnostic criteria and research literature on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, concurrent medical and psychological disturbance and clinical management of CFS.

CONCLUSIONS: Medical and psychiatric morbidity should be carefully assessed and actively treated, while unnecessary laboratory investigations and extravagant treatment regimens should be avoided. No single infective agent has been demonstrated as the cause of CFS, and immunopathological hypotheses remain speculative. The aetiological role of psychological factors is debated, but they do predict prolonged illness. The rate of spontaneous recovery appears to be high. Effective clinical management requires a multidisciplinary approach, with consideration of the medical, psychological and social factors influencing recovery.

Comment in: Chronic fatigue syndrome: is total body potassium important? [Med J Aust. 1996]

 

Source: Hickie IB, Lloyd AR, Wakefield D. Chronic fatigue syndrome: current perspectives on evaluation and management. Med J Aust. 1995 Sep 18;163(6):314-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7565238

 

A preliminary investigation of chlorinated hydrocarbons and chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether serum levels of chlorinated hydrocarbons are elevated in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.

METHODS: Chlorinated hydrocarbon levels were measured in 22 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) (as defined by the Centers for Disease Control [CDC]); in 17 patients with CFS symptoms whose history of exposure to toxic chemicals excluded them from the research definition of CFS; and in 34 non-CFS control subjects matched for age and sex.

RESULTS: DDE (1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl) ethene) was detected in all serum samples at levels over 0.4 ppb. The incidence of hexachlorobenzene (HCB) contamination (> 2.0 ppb) was 45% in the CFS group, compared with 21% in the non-CFS control group (P < 0.05). The CFS group had a significantly higher total organochlorine level (15.9 ppb; SEM, 4.4) than the control group (6.3 ppb; SEM, 1.1; P < 0.05). The toxic exposure group also had a higher mean organochlorine level (13.6 ppb; SEM, 6.2) than the control group, but the difference was not statistically significant. DDE and HCB comprised more than 90% of the total organochlorines measured in each of the groups.

CONCLUSION: The results suggest that recalcitrant organochlorines may have an aetiological role in CFS. There were no significant differences in serum organochlorine concentrations between CFS patients and chronic fatigue patients with a history of toxic chemical exposure. Therefore, exclusion of patients from the CDC research definition of CFS on the basis of a reported history of known exposure to toxic chemicals is not valid. The role of low-level organochlorine bioaccumulation in the development of CFS symptoms requires further investigation.

 

Source: Dunstan RH, Donohoe M, Taylor W, Roberts TK, Murdoch RN, Watkins JA, McGregor NR. A preliminary investigation of chlorinated hydrocarbons and chronic fatigue syndrome. Med J Aust. 1995 Sep 18;163(6):294-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7565234

 

Coping with chronic fatigue syndrome: illness responses and their relationship with fatigue, functional impairment and emotional status

Abstract:

The implications of patients’ approaches to managing chronic fatigue syndrome were examined in a cross-sectional study. With severity of fatigue controlled, attempting to maintain activity was associated with less functional impairment, while accommodating to the illness was positively related to impairment; behavioural disengagement was related not only to higher levels of impairment but also to greater emotional disturbance. Fatigue itself was positively associated with focusing on symptoms and with behavioural disengagement; it was associated also with illness accommodation, but only for illness of longer duration. The causal direction of relationships between coping and fatigue severity is ambiguous, and a follow-up study will address the effects of coping on changes in the illness over time.

 

Source: Ray C, Jefferies S, Weir WR. Coping with chronic fatigue syndrome: illness responses and their relationship with fatigue, functional impairment and emotional status. Psychol Med. 1995 Sep;25(5):937-45. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8588012

 

Can the chronic fatigue syndrome be defined by distinct clinical features?

Abstract:

To determine whether patients diagnosed as having chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) constitute a clinically homogeneous class, multivariate statistical analyses were used to derive symptom patterns and potential patient subclasses in 565 patients. The notion that patients currently diagnosed as having CFS constitute a single homogeneous class was rejected.

An alternative set of clinical subgroups was derived. The validity of these subgroups was assessed by sociodemographic, psychiatric, immunological and illness behaviour variables. A two-class statistical solution was considered most coherent, with patients from the smaller class (27% of the sample) having clinical characteristics suggestive of somatoform disorders. The larger class (73% of sample) presented a more limited combination of fatigue and neuropsychological symptoms, and only moderate disability but remained heterogeneous clinically. The two patient groups differed with regard to duration of illness, spontaneous recovery, severity of current psychological morbidity, utilization of medical services and CD8 T cell subset counts. The distribution of symptoms among patients was not unimodal, supporting the notion that differences between the proposed subclasses were not due simply to differences in symptom severity.

This study demonstrated clinical heterogeneity among patients currently diagnosed as CFS, suggesting aetiological heterogeneity. In the absence of discriminative clinical features, current consensus criteria do not necessarily reduce the heterogeneity of patients recruited to CFS research studies.

 

Source: Hickie I, Lloyd A, Hadzi-Pavlovic D, Parker G, Bird K, Wakefield D. Can the chronic fatigue syndrome be defined by distinct clinical features? Psychol Med. 1995 Sep;25(5):925-35. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8588011

 

The validity and reliability of the fatigue syndrome that follows glandular fever

Abstract:

The validity and reliability of an empirically defined fatigue syndrome were tested in a prospective cohort study of 245 primary care patients, with glandular fever or an upper respiratory tract infection. Subjects were interviewed three times in the 6 months after onset. Subjects with the empirically defined fatigue syndrome were compared with those who were well and those who had a psychiatric disorder.

The validity of the fatigue syndrome was supported, separate from psychiatric disorders in general and depressive disorders in particular. Only 16% of subjects with the principal component derived fatigue factor also met criteria for a psychiatric disorder (excluding pre-morbid phobias). Compared with subjects with psychiatric disorders, subjects with the operationally defined fatigue syndrome reported more severe physical fatigue, especially after exertion, were just as socially incapacitated, had fewer mental state abnormalities, and showed little overlap on independent questionnaires. A more mild fatigue state also existed.

Both fatigue syndrome and state were more reliable diagnoses over time than depressive disorders. The empirically defined syndrome probably is a valid and reliable condition in the six months following glandular fever.

 

Source: White PD, Grover SA, Kangro HO, Thomas JM, Amess J, Clare AW. The validity and reliability of the fatigue syndrome that follows glandular fever. Psychol Med. 1995 Sep;25(5):917-24. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8588010