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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The chronic fatigue syndrome consists of a combination of non-specific symptoms. Some believe that the CFS is subcategory of major depression, because the symptoms are similar to those of major depression. We believe that the CFS is quite different from major depression or neurotic depression, since the CFS has no lack of initiative and effort, no inhibition which is seen in endogenous depression, and sharp fluctuations in general
fatigue
, anxiety, and various persisting somatic symptoms, such as, malaise and mild fever. CFS seems to be similar to the
neurasthenia
. It is harmful, at least, in aetiology and treatment, to neglect the diagnosis of the CFS.
...
PMID:[Chronic fatigue syndrome and psychiatric diseases]. 800 11
The chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) including myalgic encephalomyelitis and the postviral syndrome is a term used today to describe a not fully recognized disease characterized primarily by chronic or recurrent debilitating
fatigue
and various combinations of neuromuscular and neuropsychological symptoms. The term CFS has been introduced and defined by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta.
Fatigue
is one of the most common symptoms in medicine, but CFS as defined by CDC has appeared to be quite rare in the general population. Researchers have suggested that the syndrome is a heterogenous immunologic disorder that follows viral infection, but despite numerous studies on the subject the etiologic factor of the syndrome is unknown. CFS is a controversial diagnosis. In a very high percentage of patients with the CFS depression, phobias or anxiety disorders have frequently preceded the onset of the chronic
fatigue
. There are many overlapping symptoms between CFS and major depression. Some clinicians suggest that it is not obvious that CFS can be distinguished from
neurasthenia
.
...
PMID:[The chronic fatigue syndrome]. 813 94
From 686 patients attending primary care physicians, 77 were identified by a screening procedure as having chronic
fatigue
. Of these, 65 were given a comprehensive psychological, social and physical evaluation. Seventeen cases (26%) met criteria for the chronic fatigue syndrome. Forty-seven (72%) received an ICD-9 diagnosis of whom 23 had neurotic depression, with a further 5 meeting criteria for
neurasthenia
. Forty-nine were 'cases' as defined by the revised Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS-R), and 42 if the
fatigue
item was excluded. Psychiatric morbidity was more related to levels of social stresses than was severity of
fatigue
. The main difference between these subjects and those examined in hospital settings is that the former are less liable to attribute their symptoms to wholly physical causes, including viruses, as opposed to social or psychological factors. Identification and management of persistent
fatigue
in primary care may prevent the secondary disabilities seen in patients with chronic
fatigue
syndromes.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue in primary care attenders. 813 22
Workers exposed to carbon monoxide (CO) at a concentration of 26.8mg/m3 at an altitude of 2,300 metres above sea level were compared with a control group of local inhabitants. There were significant differences in symptoms of headache, vertige
fatigue
and weakness memory impairment, insomnia, palpitation and neurobehavioral functions. CO concentration in respiratory air and HbCO in blood was higher but partial pressure of oxygen (PO2) and saturation of oxygen (SaO2) in blood was lower in the exposed group than the control group. Self-comparison of CO in respiratory air and HbCO in blood was higher after work than before work.
Neurasthenia
rate was significantly higher but PO2 and SaO2 significantly lower at high altitude than in the plain. The results indicated that under same CO concentrations the hazards to workers at high altitude were greater than to those working in the plain. The author recommends that at high altitude the CO permissible level should be appropriately lowered.
...
PMID:[Health effects on workers exposed to low concentration carbon monoxide at high altitude]. 835 10
The term "chronic
fatigue
syndrome" (CFS) applies to a condition of unknown aetiology characterized clinically by an association of subjective symptoms, the most constant being an invalidating
tiredness
. The diagnostic criteria in current use do not permit to isolate an homogeneous subgroup among patients consulting for chronic asthenia. In the present state of research no infectious or immunological cause has been demonstrated conclusively, although a persistent enterovirus or herpesvirus type 6 infection or a state of chronic immune activation seem to play a role in some cases. Patients who fulfill the criteria of CFS present with psychiatric overmorbidity, essentially depressive, and in 50% of the cases with the mental disorders preceding CFS. The various theoretical models linking CFS to psychopathology are discussed, and finally the syndrome is regarded as a social construction reproducing or renovating the
neurasthenia
of the late 19th century. There is no specific treatment of CFS, but antidepressants, cognitive-behavioural therapy and perhaps certain immuno-modulators can be useful. The future lines of research should endeavour to isolate a subgroup of patients with prolonged asthenia after a recognized episode of infection and to identify the immunological, psychological and behavioral characteristics of this particular group as well as their reciprocal interactions.
...
PMID:[Chronic fatigue syndrome: a critical review]. 837 54
Natural selection results in adaptations. I suggest that unexplained
fatigue
may be an adaptive response to nasal impairment. For macrosmatic animals, intact olfaction is necessary to detect predators. In such animals, any reflex (e.g.,
fatigue
) triggered by nasal dysfunction that limited exposure would offer great survival advantage. The "fatigued" animal would remain in its protected environment, unexposed to hungry carnivores, while the nose healed. In humans, clinical syndromes associated with unexplained
fatigue
(chronic fatigue syndrome, tension
fatigue
syndrome, allergic
fatigue
,
neurasthenia
, etc.) are characterized by symptoms that, in part, are nasal in origin. The older medical literature does describe the resolution of
fatigue
in
neurasthenia
after nasal treatments. Nasal reflexes in animals do cause significant systemic effects, including an inhibition of muscle action potentials that is, perhaps, analogous to the "heavy-limbed" sensation of those with
fatigue
. Furthermore, reflexes similar to the one proposed do exist in humans: the diving reflex presumably served our amphibian ancestors well as an oxygen conserving technique with submersion, but serves no known useful function now. Other human nasopharyngeal reflexes with profound cardiovascular and systemic effects are well described but only occasionally studied. The proposed nasal
fatigue
reflex should be examined as a possible ancient adaptive response to nasal malfunction.
...
PMID:Hypothesis: the nasal fatigue reflex. 847 44
Chronic
fatigue
as a presenting complaint, in the absence of other evident organic illness, was seldom reported historically before the second half of the 19th century. Its first eruption was the so-called 'bed cases' or 'sofa cases' among middle-class females in the period from 1860 to about 1910. '
Neurasthenia
' does not necessarily represent an early forerunner of chronic
fatigue
. Many patients receiving that diagnosis did not complain of
fatigue
. Others with functional
fatigue
did not receive the diagnosis '
neurasthenia
'. Both medical-anecdotal and quantitative sources make it clear that by the time of the First World War, chronic
fatigue
was a common complaint in Europe and North America. Medical concepts of chronic
fatigue
since the 1930s have run along four separate lines: (1) 'postinfectious neuromyasthenia', going back to an atypical 'poliomyelitis' epidemic in 1934; (2) 'chronic Epstein-Barr virus' infection, an illness attribution that increased in frequency after the discovery in 1968 that this virus caused mononucleosis; (3) 'myalgic encephalomyelitis', dating from an epidemic at the Royal Free Hospital in London in 1955; and (4) 'fibrositis', or 'fibromyalgia', used as a rheumatological description since the turn of the century. Recently, these four separate paths have tended to converge into the diagnosis of 'chronic fatigue syndrome'.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue in historical perspective. 849 Nov 7
The Chronic-
Fatigue
-Syndrome (CFS) has been first described in 1988 and has been also in Germany recently more frequently diagnosed. It is similar to a lot of other terms, especially to "neurasthenia", which has been introduced 1869 from
Beard
and is now again content of ICD-10. CFS is defined by primary and secondary criteria, which are however largely subjective. There are no objective signs. It is unknown if this syndrome represents a disease entity of its own. The explanation is either exclusive organic based on immunological and virological findings or exclusive psychogenic as a special form of anxiety psychosis. Possibly are both factors involved as part of "psycho-neuro-immunology". CFS is increased subject of medical certification. It has been tried to give a practical guidance to the assessment of CFS.
...
PMID:[Expert assessment of chronic fatigue syndrome]. 865 55
This article reviews the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), a disorder whose etiology is unknown. The diagnostic criteria proposed in 1994 by the CDC and the International Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Study Group are introduced. In contrast to widespread belief, there are no laboratory tests available to underpin the diagnosis of CFS; the diagnosis is made solely on the basis of clinical criteria. In the differential diagnosis, the exclusion of other conditions that can cause chronic
fatigue
, such as neuropsychiatric or sleep disorders, is of critical importance. In this context, the question as to whether CFS is a clinical entity that can be differentiated from psychiatric diagnoses, such as depression, somatoform disorder, or
neurasthenia
, is discussed. At the moment, there is no specific therapy for CFS. Therefore, therapeutic approaches are limited to symptomatic management of the concomitant sleep disturbances, pain, or psychiatric symptoms, such as depression. Patients may benefit from cognitive behavioral therapy, as this may help then to identify and exclude factors contributing to and maintaining chronic
fatigue
. An integrated medical and psychological approach should be adopted, with the aim of preventing significant secondary negative results of the illness, such as interpersonal conflicts or chronic disability.
...
PMID:[Chronic fatigue syndrome. Definition, diagnostic measures and therapeutic possibilities]. 973 40
Fatigue
is one of the most common medical complaints. Sometimes,
fatigue
is chronic, unexplained and induces significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or other important areas of functioning. This condition was described as
neurasthenia
by
Beard
at the end of the 19th Century; more recently the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggested to call it "Chronic
Fatigue
Syndrome" (SFC). Both are considered as physical diseases and share certain therapeutic measures. Pathophysiology is still unknown and may involve viral agents, immunological processes or psychiatric disorders. Similarly most of the treatments which have been properly evaluated seem to be more or less inefficacious.
...
PMID:[Chronic fatigue syndrome]. 908 78
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