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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adult-onset myasthenia gravis is an acquired autoimmune disorder of neuromuscular transmission in which acetylcholine receptor antibodies attack the postsynaptic membrane of the neuromuscular junction. Although the cause of this disease is unknown, the role of immune responses in its pathogenesis is well established. Circulating acetylcholine receptor antibodies are present in 80% to 90% of patients with the generalized form of myasthenia gravis. Most patients have ptosis, diplopia, dysarthria and dysphagia. The weakness and fatigue worsen on exertion and improve with rest. Respiratory muscle and limb weakness are rare at the onset of the disease. For the past two decades, there has been considerable progress in understanding the diagnosis and management of myasthenia gravis. The diagnosis is based on clinical presentation, neurologic examination, and confirmation by means of electrophysiologic testing and immunologic studies. Myasthenia gravis mimics many neuromuscular diseases and even illnesses such as
depression
and
chronic fatigue syndrome
. One should always exclude drug-induced myasthenia gravis for all patients. With the introduction of new modalities of treatment, particularly immunosuppressive or immunomodulating drugs, plasma exchange and thymectomy, the morbidity and mortality of myasthenia gravis have decreased dramatically to the point that myasthenia gravis should not be considered as serious a disease as it once was. Although the several therapeutic options are usually effective and have meant independence in daily life to many patients with myasthenia gravis, well-designed, controlled, prospective studies are still lacking.
...
PMID:Myasthenia gravis. 911 87
An explorative analysis of the relationship between symptomatology and cerebral blood flow in the
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) as assessed with 99mTc HMPAO SPECT scan reveals statistically significant positive correlations between frontal blood flow on the one hand and objectively and subjectively assessed cognitive impairment, self-rating of physical activity limitations and total score on Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale on the other. A pathophysiological role of frontal blood flow in the cognitive impairment and physical activity limitations in
CFS
is hypothesized. A comparison of cerebral blood flow between
CFS
, major depression (MD) and healthy controls (HC) has been performed. A lower superofrontal perfusion index is demonstrated in MD as compared with both
CFS
and HC. There is neither a global nor a marked regional hypoperfusion in
CFS
compared with HC. Asymmetry (R > L) of tracer uptake at parietotemporal level is demonstrated in
CFS
as compared with MD.
...
PMID:Comparison of 99m Tc HMPAO SPECT scan between chronic fatigue syndrome, major depression and healthy controls: an exploratory study of clinical correlates of regional cerebral blood flow. 912 17
The
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) has been intensively studied over the last 40 years, but no conclusions have yet been agreed as to its cause. Most cases nowadays are sporadic. In the established chronic condition there are no consistently abnormal physical signs or abnormalities on laboratory investigation. Many physicians remain convinced that the symptoms are psychological rather than physical in origin. This view is reinforced by the emotional way in which many patients present themselves. The overlap of symptoms between
CFS
and
depression
remains a source of confusion and difficulty. But even if all
CFS
patients were rediagnosed as depressives, this would not negate the possibility of an underlying organic cause for the condition, in view of the growing evidence that
depression
itself has a physical cause and responds best to physical treatments. There is some evidence both for active viral infection and for an immunological disorder in the
CFS
. Many observations suggest that the syndrome could derive from residual damage to the reticular activating system (RAS) of the upper brain stem and/or to its cortical projections. Such damage could be produced by a previous viral infection, leaving functional defects unaccompanied by any gross histological changes. In animal experiments activation of the RAS can change sleep state and activate or stimulate cortical functions. RAS lesions can produce somnolence and apathy. Studies by modern imaging techniques have not been entirely consistent, but many magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies already suggest that small discrete patchy brain stem and subcortical lesions can often be seen in
CFS
. Regional blood flow studies by single photon-emission computerized tomography (SPECT) have been more consistent. They have revealed blood flow reductions in many regions, especially in the hind brain. Similar lesions have been reported after poliomyelitis and in multiple sclerosis--in both of which conditions chronic fatigue is characteristically present. In the well-known post-polio fatigue syndrome, lesions predominate in the RAS of the brain stem. If similar underlying lesions in the RAS can eventually be identified in
CFS
, the therapeutic target for
CFS
would be better defined than it is at present. A number of logical approaches to treatment can already be envisaged.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome--aetiological aspects. 946 37
Disruptive changes in mood and low energy level are among the most common reasons women consult a physician. Usually no clear physiological explantation for these changes can be found. Many physicians feel uncomfortable dealing with patients with these complaints. The purpose of this paper is to discuss a practical approach to helping women with such conditions. A variety of terms have been utilized to refer to the situation in which a female patient has decreased energy or labile mood. Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) and
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) are currently popular terms. An association of low mood with menstrual cycle phase is undoubted, with the late luteal-early premenstrual phase most commonly associated with
depression
and irritability. It seems likely that women with PMS and those without it do not differ in circulating hormone levels during their cycles but rather in the brain response to these. Estrogen and progesterone receptors exist in the brain and change during the cycle. Elaborate diagnostic efforts are rarely rewarding in managing mood and energy disorders. Of more value is a careful history particularly concerned with the pattern of mood changes and with life stresses, accompanied by a thorough physical examination and laboratory tests. In most cases, changes in mood and energy are a variant of clinical depression. Changes in energy and sleep may be more evident than low affect. Treatment with an appropriate antidepressant, usually a selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI), benefits most of these patients. Allowing the patient to express concerns about stressful life situations is often of great value.
...
PMID:Mood disorders in the female patient. 916 Feb 15
Physical fatigability and avoidance of physically demanding tasks in
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) were assessed by the achievement or nonachievement of 85% of age-predicted maximal heart rate (target heart rate, THR) during incremental exercise. The association with functional status impairment, somatization, and psychopathology was examined. A statistically significant association was demonstrated between this physical fatigability variable and impairment, and a trend was found for an association with somatization. No association was demonstrated with psychopathology. These results are in accordance with the cognitive-behavioral model of
CFS
, suggesting a major contribution of avoidance behavior to functional status impairment; however, neither anxiety nor
depression
seem to be involved in the avoidance behavior. Aerobic work capacity was compared between
CFS
and healthy controls achieving THR. Physical deconditioning with early involvement of anaerobic metabolism was demonstrated in this
CFS
subgroup. Half of the
CFS
patients who did not achieve THR did not reach the anaerobic threshold. This finding argues against an association in
CFS
between avoidance of physically demanding tasks and early anaerobic metabolism during effort.
...
PMID:Physical fatigability and exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome: association with disability, somatization and psychopathology. 916 Feb 76
Three years of analytical psychotherapy with a professional woman in mid-life, suffering from
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
), is described. Gradual recovery merged into mid-life changes; marriage, along with a new balance of maternal and paternal imagos, enabled her to trust enough to become pregnant-coniunctio in the most primal bodily and psychic modes. Her life-long, schizoid type pattern, "the pendulum of closeness and isolation', with its extreme of psycho-physical collapse and devitalization, was replayed in therapy. The analyst's symbolic attitude is emphasized, containing the patient's initial affective explosion and validating the physicality of her condition. Mirroring and steady rhythmic attunement became a new, pre-verbal, source of trust-vitalization; differentiation and separation replaced defensive splitting and dissociation. Then the overwhelmingly powerful bodily/maternal could be counterbalanced by the masculine, and a transitional space emerged for symbolic work. Both the regressive and the dynamic aspects of
CFS
are located in the earliest undifferentiated, archetypal, bodily/psychic modes, when the frustration of primary needs evokes the defences of the self. It is argued that our psychodynamic understanding can contribute to the stalemate in seeing
chronic fatigue syndrome
as either an organic illness or
depression
, and that a new linking of the somatic and psychic calls for a new professional collaboration.
...
PMID:Coniunctio--in bodily and psychic modes: dissociation, devitalization and integration in a case of chronic fatigue syndrome. 916 Nov 22
In this paper I ask whether there might be any one particular psychopathology likely to be linked specifically with the physical illness known as
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) or
myalgic encephalomyelitis
(ME), and whether
CFS
/ME aids and abets and "fits' an original mental state. I think the question cannot yet be answered. However it is my hypothesis that in some personality structures the onset of
CFS
/ ME following a physical illness exacerbates negativity and is an aspect of ordinary
depression
where there is a lowering of energy levels and a loss of zest for life, or it may reveal the pathological aspect of unresolved rage. Depending on the degree of pathological disturbance, working with and through the rage may or may not result in a resolution of the symptoms of ME. In this paper I consider some of the problems in the transference and countertransference relationship, which make it extremely difficult to separate out reality from phantasy. There is then the further problem of the denial of the psyche by the patient as part of the violence inherent in the illness. One case is presented, an example of ME in a borderline male patient in whom resolution could not be achieved.
...
PMID:A view of the violence contained in chronic fatigue syndrome. 916 Nov 23
There is a strong association between the
chronic fatigue syndrome
and both depressive illness and sleep disturbance, but the efficacy of antidepressants is uncertain. We studied the efficacy and adverse effects of moclobemide in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
, stratifying the sample both by co-morbid major depressive illness and by sleep disturbance. Forty-nine patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
were recruited. Patients were given moclobemide up to 600 mg a day for 6 weeks. Four (8%) patients dropped out, three because of adverse effects. Adverse effects wee otherwise mild and transient. On analysing the whole sample, there were significant but small reductions in fatigue,
depression
, anxiety and somatic amplification, as well as a modest overall improvement. The greatest improvement occurred in those individuals who had a co-morbid major depressive illness, with seven out of 14 (50%) of such individuals rating themselves as "much better" by 6 weeks, compared to six out of 31 (19%) of those who were not depressed (31% difference, 95% CI 1-60%, P = 0.04). Sleep disturbance had no effect on outcome. Moclobemide may be indicated in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
and a co-morbid major depressive disorder. A randomized, placebo-controlled trial is needed to confirm this. These results do not support moclobemide as an effective treatment of
chronic fatigue syndrome
in the absence of a major depressive disorder.
...
PMID:An open study of the efficacy and adverse effects of moclobemide in patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome. 917 34
Chronic fatigue syndrome
remains one of the more perplexing syndromes in contemporary clinical medicine. One approach to understanding this condition has been to acknowledge its similarities to other disorders of clearer pathophysiology. In this review, a rationale for the study of neuroendocrine correlates of
chronic fatigue syndrome
is presented, based in part on the clinical observation that asthenic or fatigue states share many of the somatic symptom characteristics seen in recognized endocrine disorders. Of additional interest is the observation that psychological symptoms, particularly disturbances in mood and anxiety, are equally prominent in this condition. At this time, several reports have provided replicated evidence of disruptions in the integrity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
. It is notable that the pattern of the alteration in the stress response apparatus is not reminiscent of the well-understood hypercortisolism of melancholic
depression
but, rather, suggests a sustained inactivation od central nervous system components of this system. Recent work also implicates alterations in central serotonergic tone in the overall pathophysiology of this finding. The implications of these observations are far from clear, but they highlight the fact that, though
chronic fatigue syndrome
overlaps with the well-described illness category of major depression, these are not identical clinical conditions.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome: a brief review. 920 49
Chronic fatigue and
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) have become increasingly recognized as a common clinical problem, yet one that physicians often find difficult to manage. In this review we suggest a practical, pragmatic, evidence-based approach to the assessment and initial management of the patient whose presentation suggests this diagnosis. The basic principles are simple and for each aspect of management we point out both potential pitfalls and strategies to overcome them. The first, and most important task is to develop mutual trust and collaboration. The second is to complete an adequate assessment, the aim of which is either to make a diagnosis of
CFS
or to identify an alternative cause for the patient's symptoms. The history is most important and should include a detailed account of the symptoms, the associated disability, the choice of coping strategies, and importantly, the patient's own understanding of his/her illness. The assessment of possible comorbid psychiatric disorders such as
depression
or anxiety is mandatory. When the physician is satisfied that no alternative physical or psychiatric disorder can be found to explain symptoms, we suggest that a firm and positive diagnosis of
CFS
be made. The treatment of
CFS
requires that the patient is given a positive explanation of the cause of his symptoms, emphasizing the distinction among factors that may have predisposed them to develop the illness (lifestyle, work stress, personality), triggered the illness (viral infection, life events) and perpetuated the illness (cerebral dysfunction, sleep disorder,
depression
, inconsistent activity, and misunderstanding of the illness and fear of making it worse). Interventions are then aimed to overcoming these illness-perpetuating factors. The role of antidepressants remains uncertain but may be tried on a pragmatic basis. Other medications should be avoided. The only treatment strategies of proven efficacy are cognitive behavioral ones. The most important starting point is to promote a consistent pattern of activity, rest, and sleep, followed by a gradual return to normal activity; ongoing review of any 'catastrophic' misinterpretation of symptoms and the problem solving of current life difficulties. We regard
chronic fatigue syndrome
as important not only because it represents potentially treatable disability and suffering but also because it provides an example for the positive management of medically unexplained illness in general.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome. A practical guide to assessment and management. 921 87
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