Hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves clinical symptoms and functional capacity and modulates thalamic connectivity in ME/CFS: a prospective cohort study

Abstract:

Background: Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) has been proposed as a treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), but evidence remains limited. This study evaluated its clinical effectiveness and feasibility, as well as associated functional brain changes.

Methods: Thirty patients with ME/CFS (mean age 42.3 ± 11.7 years; 7 males, 23 females) received 40 HBOT sessions. Clinical outcomes were assessed at baseline, during treatment, and four weeks post-treatment. The primary outcome was change in the physical functioning subscale of the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36 PF). Secondary outcomes included severity of core symptoms assessed via questionnaires, exercise capacity, handgrip strength, cognitive performance, orthostatic intolerance, and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; volumetry and functional connectivity [FC]). Thirty age- and sex-matched healthy controls (mean age 42.3 ± 11.3 years; 7 males, 23 females) were included for MRI comparison.

Results: SF-36 PF significantly improved during HBOT compared with baseline (g = 0.71, p = 0.006). SF-36 pain (p = 0.002, g = 0.79) and Chalder Fatigue Scale also showed clinically meaningful reductions (p < 0.001, g = -0.87). Exercise capacity (g = 0.66), muscle strength (g = 0.40), and information processing speed (g = 0.52) improved significantly after treatment (all p < 0.05). Treatment adherence was high and tolerability was favorable, with no major adverse events reported. Functional MRI analyses revealed increased thalamic FC in ME/CFS patients compared to healthy controls in bilateral sensorimotor (p < 0.001, t = 5.65, FDR-corrected) and visuo-occipital regions (p < 0.001, t = 5.40, FDR-corrected) at baseline. Following HBOT, thalamic hyperconnectivity shifted toward patterns observed in healthy controls. Responders, defined as a ≥ 10 points increase in SF-36 PF, showed greater reductions in thalamic hyperconnectivity than non-responders (p < 0.001, t = -4.34 to -5.18, FDR-corrected).

Conclusions: HBOT was well tolerated and associated with significant improvements in physical functioning, fatigue, pain, and cognitive performance in ME/CFS. The post-treatment shift in thalamocortical connectivity toward healthy control patterns and its association with clinical response support the hypothesis that functional thalamic dysregulation contributes to ME/CFS pathophysiology and may be modulated by HBOT. This provides a network-level rationale for controlled trials to confirm therapeutic efficacy.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06118138. Registered 01 November 2023 – Retrospectively registered, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06118138?cond=ME%2FCFSamp;term=HBOTamp;rank=1.

Source: Kim L, Cammà G, Peters CK, Mantwill M, Müller O, Leprêtre N, Heindrich C, Rust R, Krill M, Hartung TJ, Reeß LG, Krohn S, Heymann CV, Wittke K, Finke C, Scheibenbogen C. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves clinical symptoms and functional capacity and modulates thalamic connectivity in ME/CFS: a prospective cohort study. J Transl Med. 2026 Jun 5. doi: 10.1186/s12967-026-08324-6. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 42249466. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-026-08324-6 (Full study available as PDF file)

Cerebral perfusion in chronic fatigue syndrome and depression

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and depressive illness share many, but not all, features.

AIMS: To test the hypothesis that patients with CFS have abnormal cerebral perfusion, that differs from that in patients with depressive illness.

METHOD: We recruited 30 patients with CFS who were not depressed, 12 depressed patients and 15 healthy volunteers. Regional cerebral perfusion at rest was assessed using region of interest (ROI) and voxel-based statistical parametric mapping (SPM) techniques.

RESULTS: On SPM analysis there was increased perfusion in the right thalamus, pallidum and putamen in patients with CFS and in those with depressive illness. CFS patients also had increased perfusion in the left thalamus. Depressed patients differed from those with CFS in having relatively less perfusion of the left prefrontal cortex. The results were similar on ROI analysis.

CONCLUSIONS: Abnormal cerebral perfusion patterns in CFS subjects who are not depressed are similar but not identical to those in patients with depressive illness. Thalamic overactivity may be a correlate of increased attention to activity in CFS and depression; reduced prefrontal perfusion in depression may be associated with the greater neuropsychological deficits in that disorder.

Comment in: Chronic fatigue syndrome and depression. [Br J Psychiatry. 2000]

 

Source: MacHale SM, Lawŕie SM, Cavanagh JT, Glabus MF, Murray CL, Goodwin GM, Ebmeier KP. Cerebral perfusion in chronic fatigue syndrome and depression. Br J Psychiatry. 2000 Jun;176:550-6. http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/176/6/550.long (Full article)