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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An anthropological view of culture and somatic experience is presented through elaboration of the notion that illness has a social course. Contemporary anthropology locates culture in local worlds of interpersonal experience. The flow of events and processes in these local worlds influences the waxing and waning of symptoms in a dialetic involving body and society over time. Conversely, symptoms serve as a medium for the negotiation of interpersonal experience, forming a series of illness-related changes in sufferers' local worlds. Thus, somatic experience is both created by and creates culture throughout the social course of illness. Findings from empirical research on
neurasthenia
in China, and
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) in the United States, corroborate this formulation. Attributions of illness onset to social sources, the symbolic linking of symptoms to life context, and the alleviation of distress with improvement in circumstances point to the sociosomatic mediation of sickness. Transformations occasioned by illness in the lives of neurasthenic and
CFS
patients confirm the significance of bodily distress as a vehicle for the negotiation of change in interpersonal worlds. An indication of some of the challenges anthropological thinking poses for psychosomatic medicine concludes the discussion.
...
PMID:Culture and somatic experience: the social course of illness in neurasthenia and chronic fatigue syndrome. 143 58
A differentiation between the normal sensation of tiredness and the symptom "fatigue" is often difficult. Both are influenced by cultural, social, psychological and biological factors, which can lead--interactively--to symptom formation. Psychiatric disorders frequently associated with fatigue are all forms of depression, somatization and anxiety disorders, chronic pain states and drug abuse among many others. In at least 2/3 of patients with the fashionable
chronic fatigue syndrome
--formerly called
neurasthenia
--a psychiatric diagnosis can be made, most of them also suffer from many symptoms attributes to the autonomous nervous system. The clinical approach should be cautious avoiding diagnostic and therapeutic overaction and therapy should emerge from a diagnosis properly assessed.
...
PMID:[Intense fatigue in humans. Psychosocial and cultural aspects]. 175 73
Studies have shown that a proportion of patients with severe chronic infection due to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) lack antibody to a component of EBV nuclear antigen. However, it is not clear whether this circumstance is one of cause or effect in regard to the pathogenesis of
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
); it is clearly not pathognomonic since it also occurs in persons infected with the human immunodeficiency virus and--rarely--in those with other EBV-related conditions. Stress and depression may be other pathogenetic mechanisms that could reactivate EBV and lead to
CFS
; examples of this phenomenon are given. The syndrome might also follow certain other viral infections as part of a process that has been called postinfectious
neurasthenia
. Currently, the cause(s) and cure of
CFS
, a common and distressing syndrome, are enigmatic and require multidisciplinary study.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome: thoughts on pathogenesis. 185 May 44
This study aimed to investigate the psychological characteristics of
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
: Holmes et al. 1988). A battery of psychometric instruments comprising the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and the Lazarus Ways of Coping (WoC) inventory, was administered to a sample of clinically-defined
CFS
sufferers (N = 58), to a comparison group of chronic pain (CP) patients (N = 81) and to a group of healthy controls matched for sex and age with the
CFS
sample (N = 104). Considerable overlap was found between
CFS
and CP patients at the level of both physical and psychological symptoms. This raises the possibility that
CFS
sufferers are a sub-population of CP patients. However, while there was some commonality between
CFS
and CP patients in terms of personality traits, particularly the MMPI 'neurotic triad' (hypochondriasis, depression and hysteria),
CFS
patients showed more deviant personality traits reflecting raised levels on the first MMPI factor, emotionality. Moreover, results were not consistent with the raised emotionality being a reaction to the illness, but rather were consistent with the hypothesis that emotionality is a predisposing factor for
CFS
. The majority of
CFS
patients fell within four personality types, each characterized by the two highest MMPI scale scores. One type (N = 20) reported a lack of psychological symptoms or emotional disturbance contrary to the overall trend for the
CFS
sample. This group conformed to the ICD-10 classification of
neurasthenia
.
...
PMID:Psychiatric symptoms, personality and ways of coping in chronic fatigue syndrome. 187 40
Chronic fatigue syndrome
is an increasingly popular diagnosis consisting of multiple psychiatric and somatic symptoms. It bears a striking resemblance to the nineteenth-century diagnosis of
neurasthenia
. Both disorders arose during periods characterized by a preoccupation with commerce and material success and major changes in the role of women. They illustrate the role of culture in the development of a new diagnosis that emphasizes a "medical" rather than "psychiatric" etiology. The authors argue that
chronic fatigue syndrome
will meet the same fate as
neurasthenia
--a decline in social value as it is demonstrated that the majority of its sufferers are experiencing primary psychiatric disorders or psychophysiological reactions and that the disorder is often a culturally sanctioned form of illness behavior.
...
PMID:Neurasthenia and chronic fatigue syndrome: the role of culture in the making of a diagnosis. 144 63
The history of
neurasthenia
is discussed in the light of current interest in chronic fatigue, and in particular the illness called
myalgic encephalomyelitis
('ME'). A comparison is made of the symptoms, presumed aetiologies and treatment of both illnesses, as well as their social setting. It is shown that
neurasthenia
remained popular as long as it was viewed as a non-psychiatric, neurological illness caused by environmental factors which affected successful people and for which the cure was rest. The decline in
neurasthenia
was related to the changes which occurred in each of these views. It is argued that similar factors are associated with the current interest in
myalgic encephalomyelitis
. It is further argued that neither
neurasthenia
nor 'ME' can be fully understood within a single medical or psychiatric model. Instead both have arisen in the context of contemporary explanations and attitudes involving mental illness. Future understanding, treatment and prevention of these and related illnesses will depend upon both psychosocial and neurobiological explanations of physical and mental fatigability.
...
PMID:Old wine in new bottles: neurasthenia and 'ME'. 218 19
In the 1980s, patients suffering from unexplained fatigue and what seemed like a prolonged attack of acute mononucleosis were given the diagnosis of chronic mononucleosis or chronic infection with the Epstein-Barr virus. Although the diagnosis has great appeal, the Epstein-Barr virus does not cause the syndrome (
CFS
) of chronic fatigue, which has been renamed and redefined
chronic fatigue syndrome
to remove the inference that the virus is its cause. From a historical perspective, both syndromes represent the 1980s equivalent of
neurasthenia
, a disease of fatigue that influenced the development of psychiatric nosology. Because patients with depression and anxiety also have chronic fatigue and because most patients with
CFS
have an affective disorder, the assessment of organic causes of this syndrome requires careful psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. Defining
chronic fatigue syndrome
as a medical disorder may deprive patients of competent treatment of their affective disorder.
...
PMID:Neurasthenia in the 1980s: chronic mononucleosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, and anxiety and depressive disorders. 218 52
Neurasthenia
was described and explained in very mechanistic terms, at the end of the 19th century, by G.M.
Beard
to account for physical and mental exhaustion and for varied somatic troubles imputed to failure of too much solicited nervous resources. This concept was then universally adopted and gave rise to diverse interpretations, among which was the Freud's one. Later, in Occident, came a deterioration, the diagnostic of
neurasthenia
giving way to those of anxious or affective disorders. In the same time, at least for ideological and cultural reasons, the concept remained lively in Russia and in Asia. During the last decade the western psychiatry has been led to accept that there are clinical situations focussed on fatigue and fatigability, even if it coined for them new terminologies (post-infectious fatigue,
chronic fatigue syndrome
, etc.) and while DSMs keep on ignoring
neurasthenia
, the ICD 10 gives it an important place.
...
PMID:[Neurasthenia, yesterday and today]. 784 49
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
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