Are symptoms of ‘hypoglycemia’ in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) associated with hypoglycemia or orthostatic intolerance in young people?

Background: Symptoms of nausea, feeling faint, malaise and mild anxiety are common in young people with CFS and popularly attributed to ‘hypoglycemia’ resulting in various dietary interventions with little reported improvement.

Objectives: To determine whether the symptoms are associated with measured hypoglycaemia using continuous tissue glucose monitoring or whether these symptoms are associated with documented orthostatic intolerance.

Methods: Nine young people with CFS (mean age 20 years) and mean duration of 4.5 years with persistently troublesome symptoms were compared with 10 healthy adult controls without diabetes. Each subject agreed to 3 days Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (Medtronic CGMS). This is routinely used in adolescent diabetics to document food intake, tissue glucose levels and activity levels to monitor control.

Subsequently 8 of these had formal cardiac tilt table testing where heart rate and blood pressure are measured supine and during 70 degree head-up tilt for up to 10 minutes to assess the presence orthostatic intolerance (either postural orthostatic tachycardia (POTS) or neurocardiogenic hypotensive syndrome). If positive, appropriate medical management of increasing salt and fluids, gentle improvement of muscle tone and blood pressure support medications, was implemented.

Results: The tissue glucose was calibrated with the blood glucose and all fell within acceptable normal range. There was statistical (but not clinical) significance in average tissue glucose in CFS subjects. 6% of time in controls and 16.8% in CFS was spent in the range <4mmol/L glucose (95% CI -23% to +2%, p=0.1) suggesting weak evidence for a difference given the variability and small sample size. The reported presence of symptoms throughout the day was not associated with significant reduction in tissue glucose levels.

Six had confirmed evidence for POTS, one for neurocardiogenic syndrome and one for a combination of both. All 8 reported improvement in all symptoms especially nausea, dizziness and malaise with active treatment of their orthostatic intolerance.

Conclusion: This study could not confirm a link between putative symptoms of ‘hypoglycemia’ and documented hypoglycemia. This suggests that symptoms frequently attributed to ‘hypoglycemia’ may be due to orthostatic intolerance and further investigation and management of this condition provides more reported relief for these troublesome symptoms.

Dr Kathy Rowe, Senior Consultant Paediatrician, Department of General Medicine, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 3052
kathy.rowe@rch.org.au  No conflicts of interest to declare. RCH internally funded.

 

Source: Katherine Rowe, Rebecca Gebert, Susan Donath, Angas Hamer & Fergus Cameron. Are symptoms of ‘hypoglycemia’ in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) associated with hypoglycemia or orthostatic intolerance in young people? From: The IACFS/ME 2016 Conference Syllabus.

 

Neuroendocrine responses to d-fenfluramine and insulin-induced hypoglycemia in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a disorder characterized by severe physical and mental fatigue and fatiguability of central rather than peripheral origin.

We hypothesized that CFS is mediated by changes in hypothalamopituitary function and so measured the adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH), cortisol, growth hormone, and prolactin responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and the ACTH, cortisol, and prolactin responses to serotoninergic stimulation with dexfenfluramine in nondepressed CFS patients and normal controls.

We have shown attenuated prolactin responses to hypoglycemia in CFS. There was also a greater ACTH response and higher peak ACTH concentrations (36.44 +/- 4.45 versus 25.60 +/- 2.78 pg ml), whereas cortisol responses did not differ, findings that are compatible with impaired adrenal cortical function.

This study provided evidence for both pituitary and adrenal cortical impairment in CFS and further studies are merited to both confirm and determine more precisely their neurobiological basis so that rational treatments can be evolved.

 

Source: Bearn J, Allain T, Coskeran P, Munro N, Butler J, McGregor A, Wessely S. Neuroendocrine responses to d-fenfluramine and insulin-induced hypoglycemia in chronic fatigue syndrome. Biol Psychiatry. 1995 Feb 15;37(4):245-52. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7711161

 

Functional hypoglycaemia postulated as cause of chronic fatigue syndrome

Comment on: The chronic fatigue syndrome: what do we know? [BMJ. 1993]

 

Editor,-In discussing the various causes of the chronic fatigue syndrome P K Thomas fails to mention one syndrome-namely, functional hypoglycaemia. We do not believe that such a syndrome exists, but in the Netherlands it has become a popular diagnosis among “alternative doctors,” who claim that chronic fatigue is caused by inappropriately increased postprandial insulin concentrations with subsequent hypoglycaemia. This disease is linked to a so called allergy to endogenous glucose.

It is clear from this description that there is no scientific basis for this syndrome, and this is confirmed in the literature. Unfortunately, doctors and dietitians who recognise this syndrome have burdened their patients with complicated diets, requiring the elimination of all simple carbohydrates. When we asked an alternative doctor why we never see hypoglycaemia in these patients we were told that we do not measure glucose concentrations at the right moment. The diagnosis should be made after a standard oral glucose tolerance test with measurement of glucose concentrations three and five hours after glucose intake. “Overproduction” of insulin is thus shown by reactive hypoglycaemia.

The use of this non-physiological test to diagnose this syndrome has no scientific basis whatsoever. Nevertheless, tens of thousands of patients are treated for this syndrome in the Netherlands.

You can read the rest of this comment here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1678679/pdf/bmj00039-0047a.pdf

 

Source: Heuft L, Bravenboer B, Ziekenhuis C. Functional hypoglycaemia postulated as cause of chronic fatigue syndrome. BMJ. 1993 Sep 18;307(6906):735. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1678679/