Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (chronic fatigue syndrome)
2,978 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hypercortisolism in depression seems to preferentially reflect activation of hypothalamic CRH secretion. Although it has been postulated that this hypercortisolism is an epiphenomenon of the pain and stress of major depression, our data showing preferential participation of AVP in the hypercortisolism of chronic inflammatory disease suggest specificity for the pathophysiology of hypercortisolism in depression. Our findings that imipramine causes a down-regulation of the HPA axis in experimental animals and healthy controls support an intrinsic role for CRH in the pathophysiology of melancholia and in the mechanism of action of psychotropic agents. Our data suggest that hypercortisolism is not the only form of HPA dysregulation in major depression. In a series of studies, commencing in patients with Cushing's disease, and extending to hyperimmune fatigue states such as chronic fatigue syndrome and examples of atypical depression such as seasonal affective disorder, we have advanced data suggesting hypofunction of hypothalamic CRH neurons. These data raise the question that the hyperphagia, hypersomnia, and fatigue associated with syndromes of atypical depression could reflect a central deficiency of a potent arousal-producing anorexogenic neuropeptide. In the light of data presented elsewhere in this symposium regarding the role of a hypofunctioning hypothalamic CRH neuron in susceptibility to inflammatory disease, these data also raise the question of a common pathophysiological mechanism in syndromes associated both with inflammatory manifestations and atypical depressive symptoms. This concept of hypofunctioning of hypothalamic CRH neurons in these disorders also raises the question of novel forms of neuropharmacological intervention in both inflammatory diseases and atypical depressive syndromes.
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PMID:Corticotropin releasing hormone in the pathophysiology of melancholic and atypical depression and in the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. 859 44

The level of bioactive transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) was measured in serum from patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), healthy control subjects, and patients with major depression, systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE), and multiple sclerosis (MS) of both the relapsing/remitting (R/R) and the chronic progressive (CP) types. Patients with CFS had significantly higher levels of bioactive TGF-beta levels compared to the healthy control major depression, SLE, R/R MS, and CP MS groups (P < 0.01). Additionally, no significant differences were found between the healthy control subjects and any of the disease comparison groups. The current finding that TGF-beta is significantly elevated among patients with CFS supports the findings of two previous studies examining smaller numbers of CFS patients. In conclusion, TGF-beta levels were significantly higher in CFS patients compared to patients with various diseases known to be associated with immunologic abnormalities and/or pathologic fatigue. These findings raise interesting questions about the possible role of TGF-beta in the pathogenesis of CFS.
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PMID:Elevation of bioactive transforming growth factor-beta in serum from patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. 908 92

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.
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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

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.
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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.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome: a brief review. 920 49

Dysregulation in the negative feedback of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system is observed in a subgroup of major depression. Recent studies have postulated that tricyclic antidepressant treatment increases the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in the brain and that such GR up-regulation normalizes the hyperactivity of HPA systems. The GR is associated with heat-shock proteins (HSPs) as a functional complex with a high affinity for steroid binding. In this study, we have examined the effects of chronic fixed (restraint) stress (CFS) and chronic variable stress (CVS) on the subcellular localization of GR and HSP90 in rat hippocampus using an immunoblotting procedure. A single restraint stress for 1-2 h and a single treatment with dexamethasone (DEX) 0.5 mg/kg, s.c. induced a translocation of the cytosolic GR to nuclei. Long-term treatment with DEX 0.1 mg/kg, s.c. for 14 days caused a significant decrease in both cytosolic and nucleic GR. There was no significant change in either cytosolic or nucleic GR after CFS for 14 days. However, CVS for 14 days increased both cytosolic GRs and HSP90 while nucleic GR was not changed. CFS for 14 days had no influence on the DEX-induced translocation of GR to nuclei, whereas GR translocation by DEX was not observed after CVS for 14 days. Gel filtration chromatography of the hippocampal cytosol after CVS indicated an increase in monomeric GR (approximately 90 kDa) and a decrease in the GR-HSP complex (approximately 300 kDa). Since CVS has been reported to increase serum corticosterone in rats, our results suggest that CVS prevents formation of the GR-HSP complex. A new intracellular environment rather than excessive serum corticosterone caused by CVS may contribute to inhibition of the formation of GR-HSP complex. It is proposed that the CVS could be an appropriate model for disturbance in the negative feedback control of HPA systems.
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PMID:[Influence of chronic variable stress (CVS) on the association of glucocorticoid receptor with heat-shock protein (HSP) 90 in rat hippocampus]. 948 79

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the immune dysfunction hypothesis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) by comparing immunologic data from patients with CFS with data from patients with other fatiguing illnesses--major depression and multiple sclerosis (MS)--and with data from healthy sedentary controls. The subjects were 65 healthy sedentary controls, 71 CFS patients (41 with no axis-I diagnosis), 23 patients with mild MS, and 21 patients with major depression. Blood was sampled and assayed for the following: (1) immunologic serologic variables--circulating immune complexes (i.e., Raji cell and C1q binding), immunoglobulins A, E, G, and M, and IgG subclasses; (2) cell surface activation markers--the proportion of CD4+ cells expressing CD45RA+ and CD45RO+ and the proportion of CD8+ cells expressing CD38+, CD11b-, HLA-DR+ and CD28+; and (3) natural killer (NK) total cell count as well as the proportion of lymphocytes expressing NK cell surface markers (i.e., CD3-/CD16+ and CD56+. Of the 18 variables studied, differences between CFS patients and controls were found only for IgG1 and IgG3. When CFS patients were stratified by the presence or absence of concurrent axis-I disease, it was the group with axis-I disorder that had the lowest IgG1 values-contrary to expectation. When data from patients with MS and major depression were also evaluated, the subclass deficiency was no longer significant. The one group to show evidence for immune activation (i.e., an elevated proportion of CD4+ cells expressing the CD45RA+ activation marker) was the group with mild MS. These data support neither immune dysfunction nor immune activation in CFS or in major depression, for the variables studied. The reductions in IgG subclasses may be an epiphenomenon of patient or control subject composition. In contrast, MS, even in the mild and early stages, as in the patients studied here, is associated with immune activation.
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PMID:Immunologic parameters in chronic fatigue syndrome, major depression, and multiple sclerosis. 979 Apr 81

This study aimed to determine symptom patterns in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), in summer and winter. Comparison data for patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD) were used to evaluate seasonal variation in mood and behavior, atypical neurovegetative symptoms characteristic of SAD, and somatic symptoms characteristic of CFS. Rating scale questionnaires were mailed to patients previously diagnosed with CFS. Instruments included the Personal Inventory for Depression and SAD (PIDS) and the Systematic Assessment for Treatment Emergent Effects (SAFTEE), which catalogs the current severity of a wide range of somatic, behavioral, and affective symptoms. Data sets from 110 CFS patients matched across seasons were entered into the analysis. Symptoms that conform with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) case definition of CFS were rated as moderate to very severe during the winter months by varying proportions of patients (from 43% for lymph node pain or enlargement, to 79% for muscle, joint, or bone pain). Fatigue was reported by 92%. Prominent affective symptoms included irritability (55%), depressed mood (52%), and anxiety (51%). Retrospective monthly ratings of mood, social activity, energy, sleep duration, amount eaten, and weight change showed a coherent pattern of winter worsening. Of patients with consistent summer and winter ratings (n = 73), 37% showed high global seasonality scores (GSS) > or = 10. About half this group reported symptoms indicative of major depressive disorder, which was strongly associated with high seasonality. Hierarchical cluster analysis of wintertime symptoms revealed 2 distinct clinical profiles among CFS patients: (a) those with high seasonality, for whom depressed mood clustered with atypical neurovegetative symptoms of hypersomnia and hyperphagia, as is seen in SAD; and (b) those with low seasonality, who showed a primary clustering of classic CFS symptoms (fatigue, aches, cognitive disturbance), with depressed mood most closely associated with irritability, insomnia, and anxiety. It appears that a subgroup of patients with CFS shows seasonal variation in symptoms resembling those of SAD, with winter exacerbation. Light therapy may provide patients with CFS an effective treatment alternative or adjunct to antidepressant drugs.
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PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome and seasonal affective disorder: comorbidity, diagnostic overlap, and implications for treatment. 979 Apr 93

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a poorly understood condition. Possible etiological factors include infectious agents, psychiatric disorders, and personality characteristics. We examined personality dimensions in 30 nondepressed patients with CFS, 20 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD), and 15 healthy controls. On the NEO-FFI, patients with CFS scored significantly lower than healthy controls on the extroversion subscale. On the neuroticism dimension of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ), patients with MDD scored higher than those with CFS, who in turn scored significantly higher than the healthy controls. CFS patients rated themselves as higher on neuroticism and less extroverted when ill than when they were well. Our results suggest that high scores on neuroticism and low scores on extroversion in CFS could be a reaction to chronic illness.
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PMID:Personality dimensions in chronic fatigue syndrome and depression. 1034 Feb 40

Abnormalities of the production of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), the adrenal androgen, have been linked with disorders such as obesity and psychological disorders such as major depression. Adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) is the primary stimulant of DHEA, and cortisol, from the adrenal. We chose to examine the DHEA and DHEA/cortisol response to the novel low-dose ACTH test in healthy subjects and a cohort with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS): this test is useful in assessing subtle irregularities of pituitary-adrenal activity. Nineteen CFS subjects (diagnosed by CDC criteria) and 10 healthy subjects were examined. We demonstrated that 1 microg ACTH significantly elevates DHEA levels, with no difference in output between CFS and healthy subjects. The DHEA/cortisol ratio decreased in response to ACTH stimulation in healthy subjects but not in the CFS cohort. We suggest this divergence of response between the two groups represents an imbalance in the relative synthetic pathways of the CFS group which, if present chronically and if comparable to daily stressors, may manifest itself as an inappropriate response to stress. This difference may be important in either the genesis or propagation of the syndrome.
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PMID:A preliminary study of dehydroepiandrosterone response to low-dose ACTH in chronic fatigue syndrome and in healthy subjects. 1110 54


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