Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We recorded event-related brain potentials (ERPs) from 13 patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) and 13 matched normal controls. To assess attentional and memory deficits in
CFS
patients, we used a short-term memory task in which events occurred in different spatial locations and the patients made a rapid-response (RT) when a letter in a relevant location matched a letter in the prememorized set (Attention paradigm). Time-on-task effects on the ERP and behavioral measures were assessed over the 2 1/4-hour duration of this task. Both groups also performed a visual Oddball paradigm, with an RT, before and after the Attention paradigm. The patients' RTs were much more variable and, in nine of 13 cases, slower than the mean RT of the controls in both paradigms. The patients' memory performance was not significantly different from that of the controls and there were no group differences in the overall amplitude, latency, or scalp distribution of the N1, P2, N2, or
P300
components of the ERP in either paradigm. The ERP and performance data from both paradigms suggest that perceptual, attentional, and short-term memory processes were unaffected in
CFS
patients and that the differences were limited to response-related processes.
...
PMID:Attention and short-term memory in chronic fatigue syndrome patients: an event-related potential analysis. 151 53
Premovement, sensory, and cognitive brain potentials were recorded from patients with
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
(
CFS
) in four tasks: i) target detection, ii) short-term memory, iii) self-paced movement, and iv) expectancy and reaction time (CNV). Accuracy and reaction times (RTs) were recorded for tasks i, ii, and iv. Results from
CFS
patients were compared to a group of healthy normals. Reaction times were slower for
CFS
patients in target detection and significantly slower in the short-term memory task compared to normals. In target detection, the amplitude of a premovement readiness potential beginning several hundred milliseconds prior to stimulus onset was reduced in
CFS
, whereas the poststimulus sensory (N100) and cognitive brain potentials (
P300
) did not differ in amplitude or latency. In the memory task, a negative potential related to memory load was smaller in
CFS
than normals. The potentials to self-paced movements and to expectancy and RT (CNV) were not different between groups. The findings in
CFS
of slowed RTs and reduced premovement-related potentials suggest that central motor mechanisms accompanying motor response preparation were impaired in
CFS
for some tasks. In contrast, measures of neural processes related to both sensory encoding (N100) and to stimulus classification (
P300
) were normal in
CFS
.
...
PMID:Cortical motor potential alterations in chronic fatigue syndrome. 1053 71
The concept of burnout remains enigmatic since it is only determined by behavioral characteristics. Moreover, the differential diagnosis with depression and
chronic fatigue syndrome
is difficult. EEG-related variables in 13 patients diagnosed with burnout syndrome were compared with 13 healthy comparison subjects in order to explore the existence of neurobiological markers for burnout. Burnout patients showed reduced
P300
amplitude, a lower alpha peak frequency and reduced beta power. These EEG-related differences in burnout patients differ from those described in the literature in depression and chronic fatigue patients. Our preliminary findings suggest that burnout might be considered as a separate clinical syndrome.
...
PMID:EEG findings in burnout patients. 2046 15
Although relating to very different concepts, sleepiness and fatigue are often confounded. However, both fatigue-associated conditions such as the
chronic fatigue syndrome
(
CFS
) and sleepiness-associated conditions such as the sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) are associated with cognitive impairment with impaired attention, concentration and memory performances. Fifteen pure
CFS
patients, without primary sleep disorders or clinically relevant sleepiness, were compared to 15 untreated SAHS patients, without clinically relevant fatigue, and to 16 healthy controls of similar age. The auditory verbal learning test (AVLT), digit span, digit symbol and finger tapping test (FTT) were used as cognitive and behavioural measures. In addition we assessed daytime EEG spectral power and
P300
evoked potentials. With exception for the digit span, all tests showed lower performances in patient groups. Recall on the AVLT did not differ between the two patient groups, but the digit and symbol spans showed more severe impairment in SAHS patients. Psychomotor performance on the FTT presented with slower hit rates in SAHS than in
CFS
. EEG theta power was highest in
CFS
patients.
P300
latencies and amplitudes did not differ between groups. Fatigue- and sleepiness-associated conditions can both present with significant and objective impairment of cognitive functioning and behavioural motor performance. In our sample cognitive impairment and psychomotor performance were worse when associated to sleepiness in SAHS than with fatigue in
CFS
.
...
PMID:Cognitive impairment in fatigue and sleepiness associated conditions. 2119 50