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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oxidative metabolism is the major source of energy for muscle activity, and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), the product of maximal cardiac output and maximal arteriovenous oxygen difference, indicates individual capacity for oxidative metabolism and performance of exercise by the large muscles. Strength, a function of muscle cross-sectional area, motor-unit recruitment, and neuromuscular coordination, is the ability to develop force in a single, brief, maximal-effort voluntary contraction of rested muscle. Weakness is a diminished ability of rested muscle to exert maximal force.
Fatigue
is a loss of maximal force-generating capacity that develops during muscular activity, likely originates within muscle itself, and persists until muscle is fully recovered. Individual perception of motor effort can be determined with standardized rating scales. These concepts are discussed in detail, their relevance to the pathophysiology of exercise in
chronic fatigue syndrome
is analyzed, and a general strategy of exercise evaluation pertinent to
chronic fatigue syndrome
is presented.
...
PMID:Physiologic measurement of exercise and fatigue with special reference to chronic fatigue syndrome. 202 Aug 10
This review summarizes the symptoms and signs seen in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
). It is based on the authors' experience with two cohorts of approximately 510 patients with chronic debilitating
fatigue
and on the reported experience of other investigators with similar patients. The most characteristic symptoms of
CFS
are the sudden onset of an infectious-type illness, the subsequent chronic and debilitating
fatigue
, and postexertional malaise; many patients also have recurrent fevers, pharyngitis, adenopathy, myalgias, sleep disorders, and cognitive impairment.
...
PMID:Symptoms and signs of chronic fatigue syndrome. 202 Aug 6
Chronic
fatigue
is one of the most common complaints. However, it can be a vexing problem in clinical practice. In contrast to serum cholesterol or blood pressure,
fatigue
may seem immeasurable. The management of
fatigue
is often complicated by the uncertainty surrounding of its cause and the frequent lack of specific therapy. Recently, criteria were established for the diagnosis of
chronic fatigue syndrome
. This working case definition does provide some guidance for the practicing physician.
...
PMID:[Chronic fatigue: myth or reality?]. 202 Oct 24
Persistent media highlighting of the plight of patients suffering from severe
fatigue
of unknown cause (postviral
fatigue
syndrome or
myalgic encephalomyelitis
) has at last been matched by professional attention. Recent research has started to clarify the roles of infective, neuromuscular and psychiatric factors in the illness, but pathophysiological mechanisms remain obscure.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue syndrome: signs of a new approach. 195 7
I urge all practitioners to accept that 'chronic
fatigue
' patients have genuine symptoms. This disease can cause depression, but for most patients it is not caused by depression. I acknowledge that a depressed patient can develop the
chronic fatigue syndrome
in the same way that they can contract any other disease. If you are unable to diagnose a patient with these symptoms please refer them to a centre specialising in this devastating and poorly understood disease.
...
PMID:A personal encounter with a mystery illness. 203 19
Thirty-three primary fibromyalgia patients were investigated for
chronic fatigue syndrome
symptoms. Significant
fatigue
was reported by 21/33 patients (63.6%), and patients reported various flulike symptoms, yet only 7/33 patients (21.2%) fulfilled criteria for the
chronic fatigue syndrome
. Only one patient reported painful lymph glands and four patients reported fever. Thus, symptoms of painful glands or fever might serve as clinical indicators, distinguishing between fibromyalgia and the
chronic fatigue syndrome
.
...
PMID:Primary fibromyalgia and the chronic fatigue syndrome. 204 79
The
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) was formally defined in 1988 to describe disabling
fatigue
of at least 6 months' duration of uncertain etiology. Reports of
CFS
have emerged from the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Spain, and France. The disease primarily affects individuals between 20 and 50 years of age, and there is a preponderance of females. Although a triggering infectious illness is reported by most patients with
CFS
, there is no convincing evidence causally linking any currently recognized infectious agent to
CFS
. Multiple minor immunologic aberrations are frequent but inconsistent and of uncertain significance. There is no consistent evidence for myopathy or physical deconditioning. Depression is found in approximately 50% of
CFS
patients, with depression preceding the physical symptoms in half of the cases. No therapy has been proved effective in controlled clinical trials with prolonged follow-up, although antidepressants have not been formally evaluated. The long-term prognosis of patients with
CFS
has not been well studied, but
CFS
appears to be a disease of prolonged duration with considerable morbidity but no mortality. Further research into the pathogenesis and treatment of
CFS
is necessary.
...
PMID:The chronic fatigue syndrome. 204 89
There continues to be an emerging body of literature related to fibromyalgia and the related conditions
chronic fatigue syndrome
and myofascial pain. During the past year, the most notable contributions included a large multicenter study providing new diagnostic criteria for the classification of fibromyalgia and clinical studies describing the overlap of fibromyalgia,
chronic fatigue syndrome
, and myofascial pain. Pathophysiologic studies were often preliminary and uncontrolled but the focus of these studies on abnormal nociception, neurohormones, and muscle metabolism provides an exciting hypothesis to unify pain,
fatigue
, and sleep disturbances, the primary symptoms of fibromyalgia. Unfortunately, new therapeutic trials were neither innovative nor especially encouraging.
...
PMID:Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain syndrome. 206 4
The
chronic fatigue syndrome
is a poorly defined symptoms complex characterized primarily by chronic or recurrent debilitating
fatigue
and various combinations of other symptoms, including psychological symptoms, sore throat, lymph node pain, headache, myalgia, arthralgias. Psychological disturbances, ranging from mild depression or anxiety to severe behavioral abnormalities, are always present.
Chronic fatigue syndrome
is the name that more accurately describes this symptom complex of unknown cause. A viral aetiology has long been hypothesized: many viruses are potential candidates, including any of the 23 Coxsackie A or 6 Coxsackie B viruses, herpes viruses, particularly Epstein-Barr virus and varicella. These studies, though interesting, remain unconvincing because of methodological flaws such as a poor case definition and inadequate control groups. This syndrome may represent an infection by a yet unidentified virus. It is more likely due to an abnormal immune response toward different intracellular pathogens. There is no treatment to ameliorate the
chronic fatigue syndrome
. Epidemiological studies are essential with explicit operational case definition before progress can be made in the management of this distressing disorder.
...
PMID:[The chronic fatigue syndrome. A multifactorial approach and the treatment possibilities]. 207 78
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
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