Circadian rhythm abnormalities and autonomic dysfunction in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis

Abstract:

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) patients frequently show autonomic symptoms which may be associated with a hypothalamic dysfunction. This study aimed to explore circadian rhythm patterns in rest and activity and distal skin temperature (DST) and their association with self-reported outcome measures, in CFS/ME patients and healthy controls at two different times of year.

Ten women who met both the 1994 CDC/Fukuda definition and 2003 Canadian criteria for CFS/ME were included in the study, along with ten healthy controls matched for age, sex and body mass index. Self-reported measures were used to assess fatigue, sleep quality, anxiety and depression, autonomic function and health-related quality of life. The ActTrust actigraph was used to record activity, DST and light intensity, with data intervals of one minute over seven consecutive days. Sleep variables were obtained through actigraphic analysis and from subjective sleep diary. The circadian variables and the spectral analysis of the rhythms were calculated. Linear regression analysis was used to evaluate the relationship between the rhythmic variables and clinical features. Recordings were taken in the same subjects in winter and summer.

Results showed no differences in rhythm stability, sleep latency or number of awakenings between groups as measured with the actigraph. However, daily activity, the relative amplitude and the stability of the activity rhythm were lower in CFS/ME patients than in controls. DST was sensitive to environmental temperature and showed lower nocturnal values in CFS/ME patients than controls only in winter. A spectral analysis showed no differences in phase or amplitude of the 24h rhythm, but the power of the second harmonic (12h), revealed differences between groups (controls showed a post-lunch dip in activity and peak in DST, while CFS/ME patients did not) and correlated with clinical features. These findings suggest that circadian regulation and skin vasodilator responses may play a role in CFS/ME.

Source: Cambras T, Castro-Marrero J, Zaragoza MC, Díez-Noguera A, Alegre J. Circadian rhythm abnormalities and autonomic dysfunction in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis. PLoS One. 2018 Jun 6;13(6):e0198106. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198106. eCollection 2018.  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5991397/  (Full article)

Chronic fatigue syndrome and seasonal affective disorder: comorbidity, diagnostic overlap, and implications for treatment

Abstract:

This study aimed to determine symptom patterns in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), in summer and winter. Comparison data for patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD) were used to evaluate seasonal variation in mood and behavior, atypical neurovegetative symptoms characteristic of SAD, and somatic symptoms characteristic of CFS.

Rating scale questionnaires were mailed to patients previously diagnosed with CFS. Instruments included the Personal Inventory for Depression and SAD (PIDS) and the Systematic Assessment for Treatment Emergent Effects (SAFTEE), which catalogs the current severity of a wide range of somatic, behavioral, and affective symptoms. Data sets from 110 CFS patients matched across seasons were entered into the analysis. Symptoms that conform with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) case definition of CFS were rated as moderate to very severe during the winter months by varying proportions of patients (from 43% for lymph node pain or enlargement, to 79% for muscle, joint, or bone pain).

Fatigue was reported by 92%. Prominent affective symptoms included irritability (55%), depressed mood (52%), and anxiety (51%). Retrospective monthly ratings of mood, social activity, energy, sleep duration, amount eaten, and weight change showed a coherent pattern of winter worsening.

Of patients with consistent summer and winter ratings (n = 73), 37% showed high global seasonality scores (GSS) > or = 10. About half this group reported symptoms indicative of major depressive disorder, which was strongly associated with high seasonality.

Hierarchical cluster analysis of wintertime symptoms revealed 2 distinct clinical profiles among CFS patients: (a) those with high seasonality, for whom depressed mood clustered with atypical neurovegetative symptoms of hypersomnia and hyperphagia, as is seen in SAD; and (b) those with low seasonality, who showed a primary clustering of classic CFS symptoms (fatigue, aches, cognitive disturbance), with depressed mood most closely associated with irritability, insomnia, and anxiety.

It appears that a subgroup of patients with CFS shows seasonal variation in symptoms resembling those of SAD, with winter exacerbation. Light therapy may provide patients with CFS an effective treatment alternative or adjunct to antidepressant drugs.

 

Source: Terman M, Levine SM, Terman JS, Doherty S. Chronic fatigue syndrome and seasonal affective disorder: comorbidity, diagnostic overlap, and implications for treatment. Am J Med. 1998 Sep 28;105(3A):115S-124S. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9790493

 

Lack of seasonal variation of symptoms in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Several of the symptoms involved in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) such as fatigue, hypersomnia, hyperphagia, weight gain, and mood show seasonal variations in the general population. The aim of this study was to investigate whether patients with CFS experience seasonal fluctuations in these symptoms as well.

Seasonal variation of symptoms was assessed in a group of 41 patients with CFS and 41 controls closely matched for age, gender, and city of residence. Participants were recruited across the US and were asked to complete the Seasonal Pattern Assessment Questionnaire (SPAQ) and the Profile of Mood States (POMS). CFS patients showed significantly lower scores on multiple SPAQ-derived measures as compared with controls. These included seasonal variation in energy, mood, appetite, weight, and sleep length.

Patients also reported a significantly reduced sensitivity toward sunny, dry, and long days than controls. No association was noted between intensity of seasonal changes and severity of depressive symptoms. Patients with CFS exhibit an abnormally reduced seasonal variation in mood and behavior and would not be expected to benefit from light therapy.

 

Source: García-Borreguero D, Dale JK, Rosenthal NE, Chiara A, O’Fallon A, Bartko JJ, Straus SE. Lack of seasonal variation of symptoms in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Psychiatry Res. 1998 Feb 9;77(2):71-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9541142

 

Seasonal symptom variation in patients with chronic fatigue: comparison with major mood disorders

Abstract:

The psychobiology of idiopathic fatigue has received renewed interest in the medical literature in recent years. In order to examine the relation between chronic, idiopathic fatigue and specific subtypes of depressive illness, we characterized the pattern and severity of seasonal symptom variation in 73 patients with chronic, idiopathic fatigue, compared to patients with major depression (n = 55), atypical depression (n = 35), and seasonal affective disorder (n = 16) Fifty of the fatigued subjects also met the specific Centers for Disease Control and Prevention case criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome, though this definition was unable to discriminate a distinct subgroup of patients, based on their seasonality scores alone. As a group, the fatigued subjects reported the lowest levels of symptom seasonality of any of the study groups. Further, even in those fatigued subjects with scores in the range of those seen in patients with seasonal affective disorder, seasonality was not reported to be a subjectively distressing problem. These findings lend support to the idea that although chronic fatigue shares some clinical features with certain mood disorders, they are not the same illnesses. These data are also consistent with the emerging view that chronic fatigue represents a heterogeneously determined clinical condition.

 

Source: Zubieta JK, Engleberg NC, Yargiç LI, Pande AC, Demitrack MA. Seasonal symptom variation in patients with chronic fatigue: comparison with major mood disorders. J Psychiatr Res. 1994 Jan-Feb;28(1):13-22. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8064638