Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Boston Globe: Biology of chronic fatigue gaining focus

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

HEALTH SENSE

Biology of chronic fatigue gains focus

By Judy Foreman  |  September 5, 2005

For years, many doctors and others dismissed people with Chronic Fatigue

Syndrome as depressed, lazy, or just plain whiny.

Now, a slew of research -- more than 2,000 scientific papers by some counts

-- is suggesting that chronic fatigue is not a psychiatric illness, but a nasty

mix of immunological, neurological, and hormonal abnormalities.

Several types of brain scans, for instance, have found different patterns of

blood flow to certain regions of the brain in patients with chronic fatigue,

and other studies have shown that patients have difficulty in thinking and

processing information, and are unable to do several mental tasks at once.

''There are objective brain abnormalities in many patients with CFS that are

consistent with the symptoms patients describe, " said Dr. Komaroff, a

chronic fatigue expert and editor-in-chief of Harvard's Health Publications, a

division of Harvard Medical School.

Chronic fatigue, which has no known cure, is more than feeling tired all the

time. Definitions vary, but the one the federal government uses says it is

characterized by persistent, unexplained fatigue lasting at least six months, as

well as four of the following: sore throat, tender lymph nodes, muscle pain,

multi-joint pain, headaches, un-refreshing sleep, malaise after exercise, and

impaired memory or concentration.

The syndrome -- which can come on after an acute infection, a head injury, a

major life stress, or from no obvious triggers at all -- now affects 800,000

to 2.5 million Americans, most of them women, said Dr. Reeves, chief of

CFS research at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But the ailment is tricky to diagnose because its symptoms overlap with those

of other conditions such as depression, Gulf War Syndrome and fibromyalgia. A

federal study now underway is designed to measure the activity of thousands

of genes in 190 people, some with CFS, some without, to find a distinctive

genetic fingerprint for chronic fatigue.

The goal, said Reeves, is a blood test for chronic fatigue.

''This illness is a nightmare that is extraordinary, " said Dr. Bell, a

specialist in Lyndonville, N.Y.

''If you're lucky, you get over CFS in a couple of years. If you're not, it

stays with you for the rest of your life. "

on, 52, a former art restorer who lives in Salem, has been

unlucky. She thinks she's had mild chronic fatigue since she was 6, but she

wasn't

diagnosed until she was 41, when her symptoms got worse. ''For a long time, my

doctor thought I was depressed, so I exercised to help with that. But when the

doctor realized I kept getting much worse after exercise, she concluded I had

CFS. I was thrilled to finally get a diagnosis, after all those years of

people saying, 'What's wrong with you?' "

Now, on is ''almost housebound, " she said. ''If I do too much, I can

end up being asleep for days. If I haven't overextended, I can be awake for 7 to

8 hours. I can't exercise at all -- it's unthinkable to walk a mile. If I

have supper with my family on a Sunday, I have to spend all day Monday in bed.

It's a devastating illness. "

Like on, many people with chronic fatigue are first told they have

depression. But the afflictions are quite different, with depression triggering

an

increase in the stress hormone cortisol and chronic fatigue a decline, said

Harvard's Komaroff. While depression gets better with drugs like Prozac, the

fatigue of CFS does not.

on's perplexing response to exercise is also typical of many

chronic fatigue patients, perhaps because in them, exercise triggers the release

of

fatigue-inducing immune chemicals called cytokines. People with the syndrome

sometimes can exercise as hard as healthy people -- they just feel awful for a

day or two afterward, Reeves said.

''There is considerable evidence from published studies that in CFS the

immune system is overactive, " said Komaroff.

Given the complexity of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, perhaps it's not surprising

that treatments are piecemeal and not very effective and that some doctors

get almost as discouraged as their patients.

''Very few doctors are willing to care for CFS patients because it is such a

downer, " said Dr. Hugh Calkins, director of electrophysiology at s Hopkins

Medical Institutions in Baltimore.

Still, experts point to remedies that may help relieve some of the symptoms.

In doses five to 10 times lower than those used for depression, tricyclic

antidepressants like Elavil can improve sleep, said Komaroff.

And cognitive behavior therapy, which teaches people to re-evaluate their

negative thoughts and behaviors, does help some people with CFS to use optimally

the little energy they have.

But mostly, it's a game of patience -- and hope, that the strides in research

will translate into better diagnosis and ultimately, better treatments, for

chronic fatigue.

Judy Foreman is a freelance columnist who can be contacted at

foreman@....  

© Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...