Course and outcome of chronic fatigue in children and adolescents

Abstract:

PURPOSE: To describe the epidemiology, symptoms, and psychosocial characteristics of children and adolescents evaluated in a chronic fatigue program and determine the course and outcome of the syndrome in these patients.

METHODS: During the summer of 1994, chart review was performed for the 58 patients evaluated between 1990 and 1994 and a telephone follow-up was conducted with 42 of the 58 families. Patients were predominantly female (71%) and white (94%), with 50% between the ages of 7 and 14 years and 50% between the ages of 15 and 21 years (mean age 14.6 years).

RESULTS: At time of presentation, 50% of patients had been fatigued for 1 to 6 months and 50% had been fatigued for 7 to 36 months. Sixty percent indicated the fatigue had begun with an acute illness and 60% had a history of allergies. Most commonly reported symptoms were fatigue (100%), headache (74%), sore throat (59%), abdominal pain (48%), fever (36%), and difficulties with concentration and/or memory (33%). Most patients had a worsening of school performance and a decrease in social activities. On follow-up, there was significant improvement in many patients during the summer after the first visit, with continued improvement in most patients during the second and third years. At time of the follow-up telephone call, 43% of families considered their child “cured” and 52% considered their child “improved,” whereas only 5% considered their child to be “the same.” Statistical analyses demonstrated no demographic or clinical factors that distinguished between those who did or did not participate in the follow-up study, or between those who did or did not do well on follow-up.

CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that children and adolescents with chronic fatigue have a syndrome that is similar to that described in adults, but that the syndrome differs in several ways, most specifically, presentation earlier in the course of the illness and a more optimistic outcome.

 

Source: Krilov LR, Fisher M, Friedman SB, Reitman D, Mandel FS. Course and outcome of chronic fatigue in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 1998 Aug;102(2 Pt 1):360-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9685439

 

Phosphate diabetes in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Phosphate depletion is associated with neuromuscular dysfunction due to changes in mitochondrial respiration that result in a defect of intracellular oxidative metabolism. Phosphate diabetes causes phosphate depletion due to abnormal renal re-absorption of phosphate be the proximal renal tubule. Most of the symptoms presented by patients with phosphate diabetes such as myalgia, fatigue and mild depression, are also common in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, but this differential diagnosis has not been considered.

We investigated the possible association between chronic fatigue syndrome and phosphate diabetes in 87 patients who fulfilled the criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Control subjects were 37 volunteers, who explicitly denied fatigue and chronic illness on a screening questionnaire.

Re-absorption of phosphate by the proximal renal tubule, phosphate clearance and renal threshold phosphate concentration were the main outcome measures in both groups. Of the 87 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, nine also fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for phosphate diabetes.

In conclusion, we report a previously undefined relationship between chronic fatigue syndrome and phosphate diabetes. Phosphate diabetes should be considered in differential diagnosis with chronic fatigue syndrome; further studies are needed to investigate the incidence of phosphate diabetes in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and the possible beneficial effect of vitamin D and oral phosphate supplements.

Comment in: Chronic fatigue syndrome. [Postgrad Med J. 1998]

 

Source: De Lorenzo F, Hargreaves J, Kakkar VV. Phosphate diabetes in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Postgrad Med J. 1998 Apr;74(870):229-32. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2360873/ (Full article)

 

Dysfunction of natural killer activity in a family with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

A family was identified with 5 of 6 siblings and 3 other immediate family members who had developed chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) as adults. All 8 met criteria for the CFS case definition as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Sixty-eight blood samples were obtained over a period of 2 years from 20 family members (8 affected, 12 unaffected) and 8 normal controls. All blood samples were tested for NK activity in 4-h 51Cr-release assays and for the number of circulating CD3-CD56(+) and CD3-CD16(+) by flow cytometry.

NK activity of the affected immediate family members (cases, n = 8) was significantly lower (P = 0.006, two-sided) than that of the concurrently tested normal controls. The results for unaffected family members were intermediate between these two groups, and the pairwise comparison of unaffected family members to either cases or controls showed no statistically significant difference (P = 0.29, two-sided). No differences were seen between the groups in the absolute number of CD3-CD56(+) or CD3-CD16(+) lymphocytes in the peripheral blood.

Familial CFS was associated with persistently low NK activity, which was documented in 6/8 cases and in 4/12 unaffected family members. In the family with 5 of 6 siblings who had documented CFS, 2 of their offspring had pediatric malignancies. Low NK activity in this family may be a result of a genetically determined immunologic abnormality predisposing to CFS and cancer.

 

Source: Levine PH, Whiteside TL, Friberg D, Bryant J, Colclough G, Herberman RB. Dysfunction of natural killer activity in a family with chronic fatigue syndrome. Clin Immunol Immunopathol. 1998 Jul;88(1):96-104. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9683556

 

Incidence and clinical relevance of antibodies to phospholipids, serotonin and ganglioside in patients with sudden deafness and progressive inner ear hearing loss

Abstract:

Immunoserological assays of patients with sudden deafness and progressive hearing losses have revealed the presence of different antibodies, leading to the assumption that immunological processes may be involved. Recent investigations have demonstrated that these patients have phospholipid antibodies that can cause venous or arterial vasculopathies.

In the present study we analyzed the incidence of these antibodies in patients with inner ear disorders. Sera of 55 patients with sudden deafness and 80 patients with progressive hearing loss were tested.

Phospholipid antibodies were demonstrable in 49% of the patients with sudden hearing loss and 50% of the patients with progressive hearing loss. Serotonin and ganglioside antibodies were found in 53% of the patients with sudden hearing loss and 63% of the patients with progressive hearing loss.

Since these three antibodies are also frequently found in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), 28 of the patients studied displayed symptoms typical for these disorders, including fatigue, myalgia, arthralgia, depressions, sicca symptoms and diarrhea.

We now recommend questioning patients suffering from inner ear disorders for symptoms typical for FMS or CFS, since these diseases are often closely related to inner ear disorders. If symptoms are present, antibodies should be tested against phospholipids, serotonin and gangliosides. If present, the antibodies are diagnostic for each syndrome. Additionally these immunologic and serologic findings show that these antibodies may play a role in the etiology of hearing loss disorders.

 

Source: Heller U, Becker EW, Zenner HP, Berg PA. Incidence and clinical relevance of antibodies to phospholipids, serotonin and ganglioside in patients with sudden deafness and progressive inner ear hearing loss. HNO. 1998 Jun;46(6):583-6. [Article in German] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9677490

 

Reviewing the reviews: the example of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that the selection of literature in review articles is unsystematic and is influenced by the authors’ discipline and country of residence.

DATA SOURCES: Reviews in English published between 1980 and March 1996 in MEDLINE, EMBASE (BIDS), PSYCHLIT, and Current Contents were searched.

STUDY SELECTION: Reviews of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) were selected. Articles explicitly concerned with a specialty aspect of CFS and unattributed, unreferenced, or insufficiently referenced articles were discarded.

DATA EXTRACTION: Record of data sources in each review was noted as was the departmental specialty of the first author and his or her country of residence. The references cited in each index paper were tabulated by assigning them to 6 specialty categories, by article title, and by assigning them to 8 categories, by country of journal publication.

DATA SYNTHESIS: Of 89 reviews, 3 (3.4%) reported on literature search and described search method. Authors from laboratory-based disciplines preferentially cited laboratory references, while psychiatry-based disciplines preferentially cited psychiatric literature (P = .01). A total of 71.6% of references cited by US authors were from US journals, while 54.9% of references cited by United Kingdom authors were published in United Kingdom journals (P = .001).

CONCLUSION: Citation of the literature is influenced by review authors’ discipline and nationality.

 

Source: Joyce J, Rabe-Hesketh S, Wessely S. Reviewing the reviews: the example of chronic fatigue syndrome. JAMA. 1998 Jul 15;280(3):264-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9676676

 

Blunted adrenocorticotropin and cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Hypofunctioning of the pituitary-adrenal axis has been suggested as the pathophysiological basis for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Blunted adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) responses but normal cortisol responses to exogenous corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), the main regulator of this axis, have been previously demonstrated in CFS patients, some of whom had a comorbid psychiatric disorder. We wished to re-examine CRH activation of this axis in CFS patients free from concurrent psychiatric illness.

A sample of 14 patients with CDC-diagnosed CFS were compared with 14 healthy volunteers. ACTH and cortisol responses were measured following the administration of 100 microg ovine CRH. Basal ACTH and cortisol values did not differ between the two groups. The release of ACTH was significantly attenuated in the CFS group (P < 0.005), as was the release of cortisol (P < 0.05).

The blunted response of ACTH to exogenous CRH stimulation may be due to an abnormality in CRH levels with a resultant alteration in pituitary CRH receptor sensitivity, or it may reflect a dysregulation of vasopressin or other factors involved in HPA regulation. A diminished output of neurotrophic ACTH, causing a reduced adrenocortical secretory reserve, inadequately compensated for by adrenoceptor upregulation, may explain the reduced cortisol production demonstrated in this study.

 

Source: Scott LV, Medbak S, Dinan TG. Blunted adrenocorticotropin and cortisol responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulation in chronic fatigue syndrome. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1998 Jun;97(6):450-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9669518

 

Factor analysis of unexplained severe fatigue and interrelated symptoms: overlap with criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The objective of this study was to identify factors explaining the correlations among unexplained severe fatigue of different durations (1-5 months or > or =6 months) and symptoms reported as being significant health problems during a preceding 4-week period.

Between June and December of 1994, a cross-sectional, random digit dialing telephone survey was conducted among residents of San Francisco, California. All subjects who reported having severe fatigue lasting for > or =1 month and a random sample of nonfatigued subjects were asked to participate in a detailed telephone interview. Data from 1,510 individuals aged 18-60 years who did not have medical or psychiatric conditions that could explain their severe fatigue were analyzed.

Common factor analyses identified three correlated factors (defined as “fatigue-mood-cognition” symptoms, “flu-type” symptoms, and “visual impairment”) that explained the correlations among fatigue lasting for > or =6 months and 14 interrelated symptoms. No factor explained the correlations among fatigue lasting for 1-5 months and other symptoms.

The combination of fatigue of > or =6 months’ duration and selected symptoms overlaps with published criteria used to define cases of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Although symptoms described in this study were reported as appearing within the preceding month, and CFS symptoms must have been present for the previous 6 months, these results provide empirical support for the interrelations among unexplained fatigue of > or =6 months’ duration and symptoms included in the CFS case definition.

 

Source: Nisenbaum R, Reyes M, Mawle AC, Reeves WC. Factor analysis of unexplained severe fatigue and interrelated symptoms: overlap with criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Am J Epidemiol. 1998 Jul 1;148(1):72-7. http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/148/1/72.long (Full article)

 

Cellular sequences in stealth viruses

Abstract:

Cloned DNA obtained from the culture of an African green monkey simian cytomegalovirus-derived stealth virus contains multiple discrete regions of significant sequence homology (p values ranging from 4 x 10(-3) to 1 x 10(-20)) to portions of known human cellular genes. The stealth virus was cultured from a patient with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

Earlier studies had revealed considerable sequence heterogeneity within DNA fragments isolated from virus-infected cells. A set of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers generated different PCR products when tested on stealth virus cultures from 4 patients with CFS. Several of the PCR products also contain regions of significant partial homology to distinct cellular sequences, including sequences repetitively expressed throughout the cellular genome.

Stealth viruses may play an important role in the origins and in the genetic diversity of both viral and cellular sequences.

 

Source: Martin WJ. Cellular sequences in stealth viruses. Pathobiology. 1998;66(2):53-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9645627

 

Gulf War illnesses: complex medical, scientific and political paradox

Abstract:

Gulf War illnesses are a collection of disorders that for the most part can be diagnosed and treated, if effective programmes exist to assist veterans, and in some cases their immediate family members.

Although these illnesses are complex and have multi-organ signs and symptoms, a proportion of these patients can be identified as having Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) and/or Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS).

Although there are many possible causes of CSF/ME/FMS, chronic infections can explain, at least in a subset of patients, the apparent transmission of these illnesses to family members and the appearance of chronic, multi-organ and auto-immune signs and symptoms. Unfortunately, many veterans who have been diagnosed with chronic infections, such as mycoplasmal infections, cannot obtain adequate treatment for their condition, resulting in their reliance on private physicians and clinics for assistance. This lack of response may ultimately be responsible for the transmission of the illness to non-veterans.

 

Source: Nicolson GL, Nicolson NL. Gulf War illnesses: complex medical, scientific and political paradox. Med Confl Surviv. 1998 Apr-Jun;14(2):156-65. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9633269

 

Heterogeneity in chronic fatigue syndrome: evidence from magnetic resonance spectroscopy of muscle

Abstract:

It has been shown previously that some patients with chronic fatigue syndrome show an abnormal increase in plasma lactate following a short period of moderate exercise, in the sub-anaerobic threshold exercise test (SATET).

This cannot be explained satisfactorily by the effects of ‘inactivity’ or ‘deconditioning’, and patients with abnormal lactate responses to exercise (SATET +ve) have been found to have significantly fewer Type 1 muscle fibres in quadriceps biopsies than SATET -ve patients. We performed phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy on forearm muscles of 10 SATET +ve patients, 9 SATET -ve patients and 13 sedentary volunteers.

There were no differences in resting spectra between these groups but at the end of exercise, intracellular pH in the SATET +ve patients was significantly lower than in both the SATET -ve cases and controls (P < 0.03), and the SATET +ve patients also showed a significantly lower ATP synthesis rate during recovery (P < 0.01), indicating impaired mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.

These observations support other evidence which indicates that chronic fatigue syndrome is a heterogeneous disorder, and confirms the view that some chronic fatigue syndrome patients have a peripheral component to their fatigue.

 

Source: Lane RJ, Barrett MC, Taylor DJ, Kemp GJ, Lodi R. Heterogeneity in chronic fatigue syndrome: evidence from magnetic resonance spectroscopy of muscle. Neuromuscul Disord. 1998 May;8(3-4):204-9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9631403