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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
The term fibromyalgia, though often used, is not justified since no fibrosis has been shown on the histological level. The aim of this article is to make a critical analysis of the semiology usually attributed to fibromyalgias, to cite the main related syndromes whose nosology is often unclear (benign
myalgic encephalomyelitis
, epidemic neuromyasthenia, diffuse idiopathic multifocal pain syndrome, chronic
fatigue
, AMP desaminase deficiency, etc.), to prefer the purely descriptive term of "persistent, diffuse myalgia with no recognized organic etiology". According to the author's experience, a psychological etiology is detectable in only 25% of the cases. Morphological or functional muscular abnormalities are sometimes found, but their significance is not well known. A real multifactorial vicious circle partly explains the physiopathological complexity.
...
PMID:[Does fibromyalgia exist?]. 218 44
There is considerable overlap in symptomatology between
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) and affective disorder. We report a comparison of depressive phenomenology and attributional style between a group of
CFS
subjects seen in a specialized medical setting, which included a high proportion with depression diagnosed by Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC), and depressed controls seen in a specialized psychiatric setting. Significant symptomatic differences between the depressed
CFS
group and depressed controls were observed for features such as self-esteem and guilt as well as attribution of illness. All the
CFS
groups tended to attribute their symptoms to external causes whereas the depressed controls experienced inward attribution. This may have resulted from differences in the severity of mood disorder between the samples, but it is also suggested that an outward style of attribution protects the depressed
CFS
patients from cognitive changes associated with low mood but at the expense of greater vulnerability towards somatic symptoms such as
fatigue
.
...
PMID:Attributions and self-esteem in depression and chronic fatigue syndromes. 229 Jan 39
We administered a standardized history questionnaire and performed a tender point examination on 27 patients with debilitating
fatigue
of at least 6 months duration, seen in a primary care practice, as well as on 20 patients with fibromyalgia. Sixteen of the 27 patients with chronic
fatigue
met the full criteria for the working case definition of
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
). Eight patients with chronic
fatigue
denied having any current persistent, diffuse musculoskeletal pain, and their tender point scores were similar to those in 10 normal control subjects. In contrast, 19 patients with chronic
fatigue
(70%) had persistent, diffuse musculoskeletal pain. The results of their tender point examinations were similar to those of the patients with fibromyalgia. Thus, the majority of these patients with debilitating chronic
fatigue
, including those who met criteria for
CFS
, met the historical and tender point diagnostic criteria for fibromyalgia. The presence of current musculoskeletal pain will identify those
CFS
patients who have fibromyalgia.
...
PMID:High frequency of fibromyalgia in patients with chronic fatigue seen in a primary care practice. 231 24
Asthenic symptoms (eg,
fatigue
, lassitude, weakness) are of major concern in family practice setting, yet relatively little research has addressed this issue. A retrospective chart review over a 10-year period was conducted to better characterize these symptoms in a rural family practice providing health care to 508 adult patients. Asthenic complaints were recorded at least once in the medical charts of 164 patients (32%) with a preponderance of female patients. Peak prevalence occurred in the third decade of age and during the summer months. Associated symptoms, mainly pain and dizziness, were reported in 75% of the cases. A cause or diagnosis was not identified by the practicing physician in nearly 50% of the encounters; nevertheless, most episodes resolved spontaneously. Patients could be subclassified into three categories according to the recurrence pattern of their asthenic symptoms during the study period. The largest category (64%) included patients who had a single or two episodes and was thus termed "episodic asthenia." Forty-five patients (27%) with recurrent episodes (mean 4.4, range 3 to 10) were classified as having "recurrent episodic asthenia." A third small group (14 patients, 9%) with persistent complaints over the years but no evidence of the
chronic fatigue syndrome
were classified as having "chronic persistent asthenia." The proposed classification may help future research of asthenic symptoms in the family practice setting.
...
PMID:Asthenic symptoms in a rural family practice. Epidemiologic characteristics and a proposed classification. 198 29
Patients with persistent
fatigue
are often suspected of having psychiatric illnesses, particularly depression. The authors used the Diagnostic Interview Schedule to assess the lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorders in 28 patients who met Centers for Disease Control case definition criteria for
chronic fatigue syndrome
. Compared with studies of the general population and studies of chronically medically ill patients who received the same structured interview, the rates of psychiatric illness in patients with the
chronic fatigue syndrome
appeared high. An examination of the medical histories of the 28 patients indicated that psychiatric disorders more often preceded the chronic
fatigue
than followed it.
...
PMID:Psychiatric diagnoses in patients who have chronic fatigue syndrome. 232 83
A retrospective study of the clinical features in 39 children who were investigated for evidence of Coxsackie B virus (CBV) infection is reported. Eighteen children were found to have serological evidence of infection. An extensive range of features was elicited in both seropositive and seronegative patients, most children complaining of abnormalities referable to muscle and, in particular, of weakness and easy fatiguability. Children with evidence of CBV infection were significantly more likely to belong to social classes I and II, to have relatives with serological evidence of CBV infection, and to show certain dysphoric features as well as to complain of sore throats. The relationship between CBV infection and '
myalgic encephalomyelitis
' or 'post-viral syndrome' is discussed, and it is suggested that these descriptions are inappropriate given our current knowledge, and inadequately describe the clinical features seen in the children under study. An alternative description, '
fatigue
-dysphoria syndrome' is proposed.
...
PMID:Features of Coxsackie B virus (CBV) infection in children with prolonged physical and psychological morbidity. 253 17
Simple rehabilitative strategies are proposed to help patients with the
chronic fatigue syndrome
. A model is outlined of an acute illness giving way to a chronic
fatigue
state in which symptoms are perpetuated by a cycle of inactivity, deterioration in exercise tolerance and further symptoms. This is compounded by the depressive illness that is often part of the syndrome. The result is a self-perpetuating cycle of exercise avoidance. Effective treatment depends upon an understanding of the interaction between physical and psychological factors. Cognitive behavioural therapy is suggested. Cognitive therapy helps the patient understand how genuine symptoms arise from the frequent combination of physical inactivity and depression, rather than continuing infection, while a behavioural approach enables the treatment of avoidance behaviour and a gradual return to normal physical activity.
...
PMID:Management of chronic (post-viral) fatigue syndrome. 256 12
Patients (n = 47) presenting to a neurological centre with unexplained chronic "postviral"
fatigue
(
CFS
) were studied prospectively. Controls were patients with peripheral fatiguing neuromuscular diseases and inpatients with major depression in a psychiatric hospital. Seventy-two percent of the
CFS
patients were cases of psychiatric disorder, using criteria that excluded
fatigue
as a symptom, compared with 36% of the neuromuscular group. There was no difference in subjective complaints of physical
fatigue
between all groups. Mental
fatigue
and fatigability was equally common in
CFS
and affective patients, but only occurred in those neuromuscular patients who were also cases of psychiatric disorder. Overall, the
CFS
patients more closely resembled the affective than the neuromuscular patients. Attribution of symptoms to physical rather than psychological causes was the principal difference between matched
CFS
and psychiatric controls. The symptoms of "postviral"
fatigue
had little ability to discriminate between
CFS
and affective disorder. The
fatigue
in
CFS
appeared central in origin, suggesting it is not primarily a neuromuscular illness. The implications for research and treatment of chronic
fatigue
are discussed.
...
PMID:Fatigue syndromes: a comparison of chronic "postviral" fatigue with neuromuscular and affective disorders. 257 80
Chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) is characterized by chronic, debilitating
fatigue
lasting greater than 6 months. Frequent chronic and recurrent findings include fever, pharyngitis, myalgias, adenopathy, arthralgias, difficulties in cognition and disorders of mood. In the majority of patients, the illness starts suddenly with an acute, "flu-like" illness. The following laboratory abnormalities are seen with some frequency, although none are seen in all patients: lymphocytosis, atypical lymphocytosis, monocytosis, elevation of hepatocellular enzymes, low levels of antinuclear antibodies, varying levels of antithyroid antibodies, partial hypergammaglobulinemia, elevated CD4:CD8 ratio, decreased cytolytic activity of natural killer cells, and low levels of immune complexes. Clinical and serologic studies suggest an association of
CFS
with all of the human herpesviruses, particularly Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and the recently discovered human B lymphotropic virus (HBLV) or human herpesvirus 6; neither EBV nor HBLV has yet been shown to play a causal role in the illness. Preliminary evidence suggests that many of these features of
CFS
also are seen in patients with fibromyalgia.
...
PMID:The chronic fatigue syndrome: definition, current studies and lessons for fibromyalgia research. 269 80
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