Increased illness experience preceding chronic fatigue syndrome: a case control study

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Almost all published work on chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has involved retrospective surveys of cases, which may introduce recall bias. Only medical records collected before diagnosis of CFS can eliminate this.

METHODS: Using data collected several years prior to the development of the illness, we performed a case control study, comparing the reported illness records of all people who subsequently made an insurance claim as a result of CFS, with those of future multiple sclerosis (MS) claimants, and those of non-claimant controls (NC).

RESULTS: The study encompassed 133 CFS, 75 MS and 162 NC cases. CFS cases had recorded significantly more illnesses at time of proposal for insurance than the two control groups, and had significantly more claims between proposal and diagnosis of their disorder. Almost all disease categories were reported higher in future CFS sufferers, lethargy having the highest odds ratio after adjustment in a multivariate model.

INTERPRETATION: The results of this paper on CFS patients who claim permanent health insurance do not support a specific viral or immunological explanation for CFS. We conclude that abnormal illness behaviour is of greater importance than previously recognised.

Comment in:

Increased illness experience preceding chronic fatigue syndrome. [J R Coll Physicians Lond. 1998]

Increased illness experience preceding chronic fatigue syndrome. [J R Coll Physicians Lond. 1998]

 

Source: Hall GH, Hamilton WT, Round AP. Increased illness experience preceding chronic fatigue syndrome: a case control study. J R Coll Physicians Lond. 1998 Jan-Feb;32(1):44-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9507441

Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Disentangling common characteristics is not so easy

Comment on: “Abnormal” illness behaviour in chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. [BMJ. 1995]

 

EDITOR,-Over the past few years I have seen a growing number of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome who have been told by psychiatrists and psychologists that abnormal illness behaviour and psychosocial factors are the main factors perpetuating their disability. Few patients have accepted or believed this explanation; neither have I. The ME Association now has evidence that the fashionable theory of abnormal illness behaviour linked to somatisation is being used by several agencies as a convenient excuse for turning down applications for financial benefits or for putting pressure on vulnerable patients to undergo speculative “rehabilitation” programmes, which they may be reluctant to participate in.

Although Peter Trigwell and colleagues conclude that patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis have virtually identical patterns of illness behaviour without any form of shared aetiology, their study suggests that the two conditions may have more in common than just central fatigue and uncertainty about long term prognosis.’ When DeLuca et al examined patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome, patients with multiple sclerosis, and healthy controls using a paced auditory serial addition test (a method of assessing processing of complex auditory information) they found that both groups of patients scored significantly below the controls, indicating similar difficulties with tasks that require simultaneous processing of cognitive information.2

You can read the full comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2551397/pdf/bmj00615-0064a.pdf

 

Source: Shepherd C. Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Disentangling common characteristics is not so easy. BMJ. 1995 Oct 21;311(7012):1093. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2551397/pdf/bmj00615-0064a.pdf

 

Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Choice of multiple sclerosis as comparison condition was inappropriate

Comment on: “Abnormal” illness behaviour in chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. [BMJ. 1995]

 

EDITOR,-Peter Trigwell and colleagues compared patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome with patients with multiple sclerosis and report similar responses on Pilowsky’s illness behaviour questionnaire.’ There is accumulating evidence that the chronic fatigue syndrome is a functional disorder, with psychological, social, and physical factors implicated in its cause, whereas in multiple sclerosis the primary cause is physical. Wood et al compared patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome with patients with various muscle diseases and found a threefold increase in psychiatric diagnoses in the group with the chronic fatigue syndrome.2 Wessely et al describe an important prospective cohort study and conclude that common infections play little part in causing the chronic fatigue syndrome but that both previous psychological disorder and previous fatigue are associated with its development.3

We agree with Trigwell and colleagues that illness behaviour is highly relevant to the chronic fatigue syndrome, but we share their reservations about the particular method of assessing this. We also suggest that the choice of multiple sclerosis as a comparison condition was inappropriate. Multiple sclerosis, in contrast to muscle diseases, follows a relapsing and remitting course, often manifests sensory (subjective) rather than motor (objective) signs, and might therefore lead to illness behaviour that is abnormal, albeit for different reasons from those that might apply in the chronic fatigue syndrome.

You can read the full comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2551396/pdf/bmj00615-0063c.pdf

 

Source: Campion PD, Dowrick CF, Edwards RH. Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Choice of multiple sclerosis as comparison condition was inappropriate. BMJ. 1995 Oct 21;311(7012):1092-3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2551396/pdf/bmj00615-0063c.pdf

“Abnormal” illness behaviour in chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the presence of abnormal illness behaviour in patients with a diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome.

DESIGN: A cross sectional descriptive study using the illness behaviour questionnaire to compare illness behaviour scores and illness behaviour profiles of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and patients with multiple sclerosis.

SETTING: A multidisciplinary fatigue clinic and a teaching hospital neurology outpatient clinic.

SUBJECTS: 98 patients satisfying the Oxford criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and 78 patients with a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Responses to the 62 item illness behaviour questionnaire.

RESULTS: 90 (92%) patients in the chronic fatigue syndrome group and 70 (90%) in the multiple sclerosis group completed the illness behaviour questionnaire. Both groups had significantly high scores on the general hypochondriasis and disease conviction subscales and significantly low scores on the psychological versus somatic concern subscale, as measured in relation to normative data. There were, however, no significant differences in the subscale scores between the two groups and the two groups had identical illness behaviour profiles.

CONCLUSION: Scores on the illness behaviour questionnaire cannot be taken as evidence that chronic fatigue syndrome is a variety of abnormal illness behaviour, because the same profile occurs in multiple sclerosis. Neither can they be taken as evidence that chronic fatigue and multiple sclerosis share an aetiology. More needs to be known about the origins of illness beliefs in chronic fatigue syndrome, especially as they are important in determining outcome.

Comment in:

Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Choice of multiple sclerosis as comparison condition was inappropriate.[BMJ. 1995]

Illness behaviour in the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. Disentangling common characteristics is not so easy. [BMJ. 1995]

 

Source: Trigwell P, Hatcher S, Johnson M, Stanley P, House A. “Abnormal” illness behaviour in chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis. BMJ. 1995 Jul 1;311(6996):15-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2550080/pdf/bmj00599-0019.pdf (Full article)