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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
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In a study of the outcomes of hysterectomy, 1,205 patients rated their fatigue levels via three single-item measures and the Profile of Mood States (POMS) Fatigue Scale. The single-item fatigue measures asked patients to indicate how often they were tired during the day, how often feeling tired had prevented them from doing what they wanted to do, and how big a problem feeling tired was for them. All four measures of fatigue were found to be correlated with pain, activity limitation, and psychological dysfunction, although the POMS Fatigue Scale was more strongly related to psychological dysfunction than the other fatigue measures. All four measures indicated substantial relief from fatigue 6 months after hysterectomy among the participants in this study. Patients who remained or became fatigued by 6 months posthysterectomy had more physician contacts than those not fatigued, and were less satisfied with the results of the surgery. Fatigue was found to be a useful outcome measure of medical treatment. Each of the fatigue measures examined provided unique and useful information, with no one fatigue measure proving to be substantially superior to the others.
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PMID:A comparison of alternative ways of measuring fatigue among patients having hysterectomy. 772 43

The results of a cross sectional study of fatigue in two large samples of patients attending primary care physicians are reported. The level of complaint of fatigue was higher in the prospective sample, which consisted of patients who had been diagnosed as suffering from a viral infection six months earlier. Duration and frequency of experience of fatigue correlated with severity in both samples. Severity, duration and frequency were continuously distributed in these populations. Attribution of fatigue in these two samples was mixed: social stresses, current physical illness and psychological problems all being offered as explanations. 11% of the cross sectional sample and 17% of the prospective sample met study operational criteria for a possible chronic fatigue state. These patients were assessed in greater detail. The majority had a diagnosable psychiatric disorder, predominantly depression. Physical illnesses were not adequate to explain these fatigue states. These studies in primary care do not support a clinical entity of a "chronic fatigue syndrome". Some patients in primary care settings have complaints of fatigue that are both disabling and long lasting, but they do not form a distinct group although the majority are likely however to be suffering from a concurrent psychiatric disorder. In contrast to similar patients with chronic fatigue syndromes attending hospital clinics, primary care patients with complaints of fatigue are much more varied in their ideas of causation with considerable less evidence of disease conviction.
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PMID:[Epidemiologic study of chronic fatigue in primary care (general practice)]. 784 54

This article illustrates that the diagnostic evaluation as well as the management of the patient presenting with chronic fatigue can be done in an orderly manner. If a medical illness is the cause of the patient's fatigue, this is usually evident on initial presentation. A thorough history and complete physical examination, in conjunction with some screening laboratory tests, can rule out most medical causes of fatigue, and any remaining cases declare themselves over the next several visits. If a medical cause is not evident, a further "fishing expedition" is fruitless. Psychiatric illness, such as depression or generalized anxiety disorder, accounts for another significant proportion of cases of chronic fatigue. As with medical illness, psychiatric illness should be suspected based on history and is not a diagnosis of exclusion. Some patients presenting with chronic fatigue have a history and symptom pattern consistent with the diagnosis of CFS. The cause of this syndrome is controversial and is still unknown. The clinician, however, can offer the patient care in an environment that is respectful of their physical and psychological discomfort and can provide significant symptomatic improvement to the patient. Lastly, some patients with fatigue do not fit any diagnostic category, including CFS. As with many other common complaints, such as headaches or abdominal pain, although a diagnosis may not be given to the patient, the clinician can do a lot to reassure the patient and assist the patient in living with his or her symptoms. As Solberg eloquently wrote: "[E]valuation of the fatigued patient requires all of a physician's best attributes--a broad view of disease, psychosocial sensitivity, and a good ongoing relationship with the patient."
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PMID:The chronically fatigued patient. 787 93

The Lundby study is a prospective, epidemiological survey of mental health in a total population. When evaluating the material of 2550 individuals followed from 1947 to 1972, we found a large group with mental tiredness as the dominating symptom. Next to depression this was the most frequent diagnosis in the population. According to our concept of Tiredness, one third of the women ran a lifetime risk of developing a first-ever episode of Tiredness, while the risk for men was one fifth. The incidence of Tiredness is described together with the total frequency of episodes. The course of mental illness starting with a first episode of Tiredness within the 25-year investigation period shows that about one third of the men and half of the women relapsed into Tiredness or other mental illnesses, not infrequently with a serious outcome. However, most of the episodes of Tiredness lasted less than 2 years and were of milder impairment. We emphasize the importance of further investigations by means of epidemiological, clinical and neurochemical methods as regards the heterogeneous syndrome of mental fatigue.
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PMID:Mental tiredness in the Lundby study: incidence and course over 25 years. 790 23

Two hundred and fifty patients attending primary care with glandular fever or an upper respiratory tract infection were studied prospectively up to 6 months after onset. Of these patients 228 were interviewed with the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule and the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schzophrenia, giving Research Diagnostic Criteria for psychiatric disorders. The experience of severe social adversity (provoking agents) had a significant association with psychiatric disorder at 2 months (odds ratio = 5.3) and 6 months (odds ratio = 5.8) after onset of infection. This association was especially significant for depressive illness (odds ratio = 9.1 at 2 months and 11.9 at 6 months). In contrast, social adversity had little association with the development of the post-infectious fatigue syndrome, or delayed physical recovery. Social adversity may be an important maintaining factor for psychiatric disorders, especially depressive illness, following acute infections.
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PMID:The effect of social adversity on the fatigue syndrome, psychiatric disorders and physical recovery, following glandular fever. 799 47

The chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a constellation of physical and psychological symptoms including incapacitating fatigue associated with a marked reduction in activity. Although the etiology of CFS is unclear, reports in the literature suggest the presence of both physical and psychological dysfunction in this patient population. These findings have led to a debate between those who consider CFS to be primarily organic in origin and those who view CFS as a primary psychiatric disorder characterized by somatic preoccupations. This debate led the authors to develop a working model for CFS designed to integrate the psychological and physiological findings, based on the hypothesis that early object relations have an etiologic relationship to CFS. This hypothesis then formed the rationale for a psychoanalytic treatment approach which will be described. There are no published case reports describing psychoanalytic psychotherapy as a primary treatment modality for this patient population. The current paper attempts to fill a void. Two case reports of long-term (> 18 months), intensive (2-3 times per week) psychoanalytic psychotherapy with CFS patients referred by infectious disease specialists at a university teaching hospital will be presented. The following aspects of the treatment will be highlighted: 1) the unique opportunity afforded by this treatment to view the nature of CFS, namely, the intimate relationship over time of fatigue symptoms to disturbances in object relationships, particularly within the transference; (2) the improvement in symptoms when this relationship is seen and understood by the patient; (3) the importance of the patient-therapist bond as a facilitating medium for clinical improvement; (4) the challenges involved in treating CFS patients with psychotherapy.
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PMID:A psychodynamic view of the chronic fatigue syndrome. The role of object relations in etiology and treatment. 985 53

Postpartum fatigue may be a symptom of significant medical or psychiatric illness and must be distinguished from tiredness, which is a common adaptive response after delivery. Anemia, infections, thyroid disorders, mood disorders and cardiomyopathy are important causes of fatigue in the postpartum period. Recognition and treatment of these conditions improves the medical care of women following delivery.
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PMID:Postpartum fatigue. 801 47

The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of mental illness and to evaluate the quality of life of patients with neurocirculatory asthenia. A consecutive series of 80 patients who satisfied the diagnostic criteria developed by Kannel et al. for neurocirculatory asthenia was included in this study. Patients underwent a psychiatric diagnostic research interview and extensive psychometric evaluation, with both observer and self-rated scales for depression, anxiety, phobic symptoms, quality of life and abnormal illness behavior. In 47 patients (59%), a psychiatric diagnosis (mainly an anxiety disorder) antedated the onset of neurocirculatory asthenia, which was thus defined as secondary, also because cardiorespiratory symptoms were part of the mental symptoms. In the remaining 33 patients (41%) neurocirculatory asthenia was the primary disorder. Patients with secondary neurocirculatory asthenia reported significantly higher levels of anxiety, depression, social phobia, abnormal illness behavior and an impaired quality of life compared with patients with primary neurocirculatory asthenia. This latter did not significantly differ in these variables (except for depression) from healthy control subjects matched for sociodemographic variables. At a 1-year follow-up, patients with primary neurocirculatory asthenia had a much better prognosis than those with secondary neurocirculatory asthenia. The results indicate the feasibility of the primary/secondary distinction based on the time of onset of mental and cardiorespiratory symptoms in neurocirculatory asthenia. Since only about one quarter of the patients were found to suffer from decreased energy and fatigue according to specified criteria, the terms neurocirculatory asthenia and effort syndrome should probably be discarded.
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PMID:Neurocirculatory asthenia: a reassessment using modern psychosomatic criteria. 806 69

Despite decades of aggressive research into the cause and cure of multiple sclerosis (MS), a direct management strategy remains lacking. As research continues, patients who strive for an improved quality of life may attain it through the improved management of symptoms. Symptoms occur in MS as a consequence of loss of myelin (primary symptoms), as the result of primary symptoms (secondary symptoms), and because of psychological dysfunction associated with MS (tertiary symptoms). This paper emphasizes the recent developments in the management of primary symptoms including visual loss, weakness, spasticity, urinary and sexual dysfunction, and fatigue. The adjective multiple emphasizes the numerous potential symptoms of MS. It is through their management that people with MS may lead happier, more productive lives until a cause and cure are found.
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PMID:Symptomatic therapy of multiple sclerosis. 808 16

This prospective, cohort study examined the prevalence of sleep disorders among highly selected patients with chronic fatigue. On the basis of responses suggestive of sleep pathology on a screening questionnaire, 59 patients from a university-based clinic for chronic fatigue who had undergone a medical and psychiatric evaluation underwent polysomnography. Criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) were met by 64% of patients and those for a current psychiatric disorder were met by 41%. Overall, 41% of patients had abnormal results for a multiple sleep latency test and 81% had at least one sleep disorder, most frequently sleep apnea (44%) and idiopathic hypersomnia (12%). In comparing patients who did and did not meet CFS criteria, no significant differences were found in individual sleep symptoms or sleep disorders. Likewise, symptoms and sleep disorders were unrelated to psychiatric diagnoses. In conclusion, chronically fatigued patients with suggestive symptoms may have potentially treatable coexisting sleep disorders that are not associated with meeting criteria for CFS or a current psychiatric disorder.
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PMID:Sleep disorders in patients with chronic fatigue. 814 56


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