Neuroimaging in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

The diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is made difficult by the absence of specific biomedical markers, and depends primarily on determining whether subjective information provided by the patient meets the clinical case definition of this syndrome. Reported cognitive difficulties and/or complaints of headache may instigate referral for brain imaging.

This article will discuss the value of neuroimaging in evaluating CFS, specifically reviewing studies that (1) used static magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess structural abnormalities; and (2) assessed regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) via detection of Tc-99m hexamethylpropyl-eneamine oxime distribution by single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Future research design considerations are explored including (1) the utilization of positron emission tomography (PET) and other emerging neuroimaging technologies; and (2) methodological concerns, i.e., the influence of psychopathology (such as depression) and neurologic disease (such as multiple sclerosis) as possible confounding factors.

 

Source: Lange G, Wang S, DeLuca J, Natelson BH. Neuroimaging in chronic fatigue syndrome. Am J Med. 1998 Sep 28;105(3A):50S-53S. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9790482

 

Neuroimaging in chronic fatigue syndrome

The link between viral infection, the brain, and fatiguing illnesses has a long history. This combination forced itself on the medical imagination after events in Austria in the winter of 1916-17. A virulent form of influenza was noted, characteristically, to produce lethargy and later, to leave a host of neurological deficits in its wake. By the spring of 1918 several English cases of encephalitis lethargica had been reported and in the next year the disease was notifiable. The peak of the epidemic occurred in 1924 in the United Kingdom, at which time the Board of Control reported that many cases had been admitted to hospital with psychiatric disturbances.1 Hence the notion that apparent psychiatric illnesses may be misdiagnosed manifestations of a postinfectious cerebral disease began; it refuses to disappear.23

You can read the rest of this article here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC486356/pdf/jnnpsyc00017-0001.pdf

 

Source: Cope H, David AS. Neuroimaging in chronic fatigue syndrome. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1996 May;60(5):471-3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC486356/