Hypochondriasis influences quality-of-life outcomes in patients with chronic fatigue

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: To determine how hypochondriacal symptoms influence the quality-of-life outcomes of patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue.

METHODS: Cross-sectional cohort study of a consecutive sample of 71 patients (mean duration of fatigue of 4.1 years). Forty-eight (68%) patients met criteria for current major depression and 32 (45%) met criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). All patients received a comprehensive medical and psychiatric evaluation. Quality-of-life and physical, depressive and hypochondriacal symptom scores were assessed through reliable self-report questionnaires and a structured interview. A path model expressing the relation between predictor variables (hypochondriasis and depression), intervening variables (physical symptoms) and quality of life was postulated and evaluated using structural equation methods.

RESULTS: The paths linking hypochondriasis with physical symptoms and mental health and the path connecting physical symptoms and quality of life were each statistically significant. The model applied especially well to patients who fulfilled CFS criteria.

CONCLUSIONS: The quality of life of chronic fatigue patients correlates with the severity of their physical symptoms and their hypochondriacal disposition toward illness.

 

Source: Manu P, Affleck G, Tennen H, Morse PA, Escobar JI. Hypochondriasis influences quality-of-life outcomes in patients with chronic fatigue. Psychother Psychosom. 1996 Mar-Apr;65(2):76-81. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8711085

 

Alpha-delta sleep in patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue

Abstract:

Our prospective, standardized cohort study was designed to assess the presence of alpha wave intrusions during non-rapid eye movement sleep (alpha-delta sleep) and its relationship to fibromyalgia, major depression, and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue.

The study group comprised 30 consecutive patients seen at a university hospital referral clinic for evaluation of chronic fatigue. All patients had nocturnal polysomnography, dolorimetric tender point assessment for fibromyalgia, a comprehensive history, physical, and laboratory evaluation, and a structured psychiatric interview. Alpha-delta sleep was identified in 8 of the 30 patients (26%), major depression in 20 (67%), CFS in 15 (50%), and fibromyalgia in 4 (13%). Ten of the 30 patients (33%) had a primary sleep disorder (sleep apnea, periodic limb movements, or narcolepsy).

Alpha-delta sleep was not significantly correlated with fibromyalgia, CFS, major depression, or primary sleep disorders, but was significantly more common among patients who had chronic fatigue without major depression. We conclude that primary sleep disorders are relatively common among patients with chronic fatigue and must be diligently sought and treated. Alpha-delta sleep is not a marker of fibromyalgia or CFS, but may contribute to the illness of nondepressed patients with these conditions.

Comment in: Sleep disorders and chronic fatigue. [South Med J. 1994]

 

Source: Manu P, Lane TJ, Matthews DA, Castriotta RJ, Watson RK, Abeles M. Alpha-delta sleep in patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue. South Med J. 1994 Apr;87(4):465-70. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8153772

 

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

 

Chronic fatigue syndromes in clinical practice

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue is a common and difficult challenge in clinical practice. The majority of patients with this chief complaint have treatable mood or anxiety disorders, complicated by a tendency toward somatization. A minority of patients suffer from sleep disorders, endocrinologic abnormalities, or chronic inflammatory conditions. Prolonged recovery after viral infections is only rarely the cause of chronic fatigue. Specific pharmacologic interventions and cognitive-behavioral therapy are effective in an environment that is sensitive to the patient’s interpretation of symptoms and avoids unproven medical investigations and therapies.

 

Source: Manu P, Lane TJ, Matthews DA. Chronic fatigue syndromes in clinical practice. Psychother Psychosom. 1992;58(2):60-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1484921

 

The pathophysiology of chronic fatigue syndrome: confirmations, contradictions, and conjectures

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To examine published data regarding patient cohorts with the recently defined chronic fatigue syndrome.

METHOD: Review of thirty-two peer-assessed research publications that included full disclosure of the methodology employed; classification of the findings as confirmed, contradictory, or non-duplicated.

RESULTS: Research studies have confirmed that the majority of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome: 1) are white middle-aged women, 2) have a high prevalence of current major depression and somatization disorder, 3) have abnormal personality traits, 4) believe that their fatigue has a physical cause, and 5) show mild abnormalities of humoral immunity. Contradictory data have been presented with regard to: 1) the time of onset of depressive disorders, 2) the etiologic role of herpetic and enteroviral infections, 3) the presence of abnormal cellular immunity, and 4) the clinical utility of immunoglobulin therapy. Non-duplicated research has indicated 1) hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction, 2) abnormalities on magnetic resonance images of the brain, 3) altered cytokine production, and 4) the possibility of retroviral infection.

CONCLUSIONS: As presently defined, the chronic fatigue syndrome has many of the clinical and biological features associated with depressive and somatoform disorders. A specific etiologic role for infections or immune dysfunction has not been confirmed.

 

Source: Manu P, Lane TJ, Matthews DA. The pathophysiology of chronic fatigue syndrome: confirmations, contradictions, and conjectures. Int J Psychiatry Med. 1992;22(4):397-408. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1338059

 

Evaluation and management of patients with chronic fatigue

Abstract:

Chronic fatigue is a common and disabling problem in primary care practice. The differential diagnosis of chronic fatigue is extensive and includes medical disorders, altered physiologic states (eg, pregnancy, exertion), psychiatric disorders, lifestyle derangements, drugs, and controversial entities (eg, chronic candidiasis, food allergies, environmental illness, and chronic fatigue syndrome). The most common diagnoses are psychiatric disorders, including mood, anxiety, and somatoform disorders.

A comprehensive approach to diagnosis and management is necessary, including structured psychiatric interviewing, functional assessment, and elicitation of the patient’s diagnostic beliefs. Patients often believe they are suffering from an organic medical disorder (eg, viral or immunologic) and resist psychiatric labelling of their symptoms and referral to mental health practitioners. Establishing and maintaining rapport, having a flexible approach, and demonstrating a personal concern for the patient is essential. Drug therapy for specific psychiatric and medical illnesses and cognitive-behavioral approaches for enhancing coping mechanisms are effective.

 

Source: Matthews DA, Manu P, Lane TJ. Evaluation and management of patients with chronic fatigue. Am J Med Sci. 1991 Nov;302(5):269-77. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1750445

 

Depression and somatization in the chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

PURPOSE: To report the prevalence, clinical features, and diagnostic associations of the proposed chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in a cohort of patients with chronic fatigue and to assess the usefulness of a structured psychiatric interview for detecting previously unrecognized psychiatric morbidity in patients with CFS.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: A consecutive sample of 200 adult patients with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue was prospectively evaluated in a referral-based clinic within a university general medicine practice. All patients received a thorough medical history, physical examination, diagnostic laboratory testing, and portions of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, version III-A. The criteria for CFS were applied, and patients with CFS were compared with matched control subjects from the inception cohort.

RESULTS: The 60 patients with CFS had similar likelihoods of current psychiatric disorders (78% versus 82%), active mood disorders (73% versus 77%), and preexisting psychiatric disorders (42% versus 43%) when compared with fatigued control subjects. Patients with CFS were more likely to have somatization disorder (p less than 0.001) and to attribute their illness to a physical cause (p less than 0.005) than fatigued controls. Patients with CFS also displayed functional symptoms, often lifelong, which are not part of the case definition of CFS. Depressive features in patients with CFS were similar to those of control subjects, but a trend toward suicidal behavior was noted.

CONCLUSIONS: Patients with CFS have a high prevalence of unrecognized, current psychiatric disorders, which often predate their fatigue syndrome. Assessment of patients with CFS should include a structured psychiatric evaluation.

 

Comment in:

Chronic fatigue syndrome and psychiatric disorders. [Am J Med. 1992]

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and psychiatric disorders. [Am J Med. 1994]

 

Source: Lane TJ, Manu P, Matthews DA. Depression and somatization in the chronic fatigue syndrome. Am J Med. 1991 Oct;91(4):335-44. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1951377

 

Antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus in patients with chronic fatigue

Abstract:

To clarify the role of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection and the value of EBV antibody testing in evaluating patients with chronic fatigue, we studied 200 consecutive patients with chronic fatigue (mean duration, 9 years).

Complete EBV serologic panels were obtained for 154 patients, 35 (23%) of whom met serologic or clinical criteria for chronic or reactivated EBV infection. We compared these patients with chronic EBV infection (CEBV cases) to 35 age- and sex-matched patients who were selected from the same cohort of fatigued patients but who did not meet the criteria (CEBV control subjects).

We found few differences between groups in demographic characteristics, clinical features, and symptoms; CEBV cases were more likely to meet criteria for the proposed chronic fatigue syndrome (14% vs 0%), and to report that they suffered from an influenza-like illness at the onset of their fatigue syndrome (34% vs 12%), that they lost their job because of their fatigue (37% vs 11%), and that their fatigue was improved by recreational activity (26% vs 3%).

Physical examination and laboratory testing showed few abnormalities in either group. Psychiatric morbidity was common in both groups, including mood disorders (63% of CEBV cases vs 54% of CEBV controls), anxiety (11% vs 9%) and somatization disorder (9% in each group).

We conclude that EBV serologic patterns have little clinical usefulness in evaluating patients with chronic fatigue.

 

Source: Matthews DA, Lane TJ, Manu P. Antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus in patients with chronic fatigue. South Med J. 1991 Jul;84(7):832-40. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1648795

 

Panic disorder among patients with chronic fatigue

Abstract:

Among 200 adults with a chief complaint of chronic fatigue evaluated in an internal medicine practice, currently active panic disorder was diagnosed in 26 patients (13%), a frequency tenfold greater than that in the general population. Panic disorder preceded or was coincidental with the onset of chronic fatigue in 21 of these patients.

In comparison with the rest of the study cohort, significantly more patients with panic disorder had a history of severe depression, including persistent thoughts of death or suicide. Moreover, more patients with panic disorder showed a lifetime tendency to have physical symptoms that remained unexplained after medical evaluation.

Our findings suggest that treatable panic disorder is an important contributor not only to major depression and somatization, but also to the etiology and clinical presentation of chronic fatigue in patients in an outpatient practice.

 

Source: Manu P, Matthews DA, Lane TJ. Panic disorder among patients with chronic fatigue. South Med J. 1991 Apr;84(4):451-6. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2014428

 

The low yield of physical examinations and laboratory investigations of patients with chronic fatigue

Abstract:

Fatigue is a common symptom but guidelines for its appropriate evaluation are lacking. The authors prospectively studied 100 adults with a chief complaint of fatigue lasting at least 1 month in order to determine the diagnostic contribution of physical examinations and laboratory investigations.

The evaluations were performed in the specialized clinic of a faculty practice. Physical examinations produced diagnostic information in 2% of patients, and laboratory investigations elucidated the cause of fatigue in 5% of patients. Structured follow-up evaluations after an average interval of 10 months failed to reveal any new organic causes for the fatigue symptom. Minor laboratory abnormalities were relatively common but did not contribute to the diagnostic process and did not seem to influence the clinical outcome.

The authors conclude that the traditional medical evaluation of patients complaining of chronic fatigue has a low yield in discovering treatable physical disorders.

 

Source:  Lane TJ, Matthews DA, Manu P. The low yield of physical examinations and laboratory investigations of patients with chronic fatigue. Am J Med Sci. 1990 May;299(5):313-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2337122