Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Ferrari R

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic," originating from Planet Earth —» Ferrari R.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Review New insights into culture driven disorders. 2004

Aceves-Avila FJ, Ferrari R, Ramos-Remus C. · Hospital General Regional No. 46, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Unidad de Investigación en Enfermedades Crónico-Degenerativas SC, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico. · Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol. · Pubmed #15121037 No free full text.

Abstract: Rheumatologists frequently encounter patients whose illnesses lack face-value; that is, they lack the typical objective features of pathology that rheumatologists traditionally rely on for diagnosis and developing effective treatment approaches: namely fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, Gulf War syndrome, chronic whiplash, chronic low back pain, etc. In this article, we examine this group of illnesses as culture-driven disorders to emphasize the central importance of various societal constraints in the ultimate presentation of patients with these illnesses. We will examine them by first understanding the purpose they serve, the underlying factors that compel societal institutions to sanctify these disorders as diseases, and how research is beginning to examine the behaviour that captures and packages these symptoms to produce their clinical presentation. With this research understanding, rheumatologists may be able to offer patients more useful action plans, but likely changes in societal approaches to the expressions of distress and changes in disability and compensation systems will also be required.

2 Review Metabolic modulation and optimization of energy consumption in heart failure. 2003

Ferrari R, Cicchitelli G, Merli E, Andreadou I, Guardigli G. · Dipartimento di Cardiologia, Università di Ferrara, Arcispedale Sant'Anna, Ferrara, Italy. · Med Clin North Am. · Pubmed #12693736 No free full text.

Abstract: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a common and disabling syndrome with a poor prognosis. It is a major and increasing public health problem. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, diuretics, and digitalis are the standards treatments for CHF. Other drugs, such as beta-blockers, spironolactone, calcium antagonists, vasodilators, and antiarrhythmic agents are used to counteract the progression of the syndrome or to improve the hemodynamic profile. Despite optimum treatment with neurohumoral antagonists, prognosis of CHF remains poor; the patients complain of persistent reductions in their exercise capacity and quality of life. Fatigue and shortness of breath, two common and disabling symptoms in patient with CHF, are relatively independent from hemodynamic and neuroendocrine changes, although they seem to be related to the impairment of peripheral muscle metabolism and energetic phosphate production. Therefore, CHF is a complex metabolic syndrome in which the metabolism of cardiac and peripheral muscles is impaired and novel therapeutic strategies have been aimed at positive modulation with compounds such as carnitine, trimetazidine, and ranolazine.

3 Review The biopsychosocial model--a tool for rheumatologists. 2000

Ferrari R. · No affiliation provided · Baillieres Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol. · Pubmed #11092802 No free full text.

Abstract: Rheumatologists grapple in daily practice with many controversial syndromes including fibromyalgia, late whiplash syndrome, chronic fatigue syndrome, Gulf War syndrome, the adverse outcomes of silicon breast implants and so on. For decades, much of the debate surrounding, and the approach to these controversial syndromes has centred on a model creating two camps-organic versus non-organic. While each camp has its support, this model seems to have failed in achieving the desired understanding of these syndromes, most particularly in offering the rheumatologist a practical and coherent approach to effective treatment. This chapter will thus introduce the biopsychosocial model, its elements, its advantages over the traditional model and the practical application of this model. Examples will be given of how rheumatologists can approach the treatment of these syndromes through patient education and the implementation of a change in illness behaviour.

4 Article From railway spine to whiplash--the recycling of nervous irritation. 2003

Ferrari R, Shorter E. · History of Medicine Department, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. · Med Sci Monit. · Pubmed #14586283 No free full text.

Abstract: The search for a specific structural basis for chronic whiplash and other chronic pain and fatigue syndromes has been in progress for decades, and yet currently there remains no "structural" solution to these enigmata. In light of the failure of research to identify the chronic "damage" or pathology as lying in a muscular, bony, or "connective tissue" sites for many chronic pain syndromes like whiplash, fibromyalgia, et cetera, more recent attention has been paid to nervous system structures. Nerve irritation has been implicated as the basis for the pain and other symptoms that are common to many chronic disability syndromes. We postulate here, however, that the concept of nervous irritation has been prostituted for centuries whenever more concrete structural explanations for chronic pain and other controversial illness have been untenable. We suggest that, after each cycle of nervous irritation as a disease, and subsequent dismissal of the notion, the doctrine of irritation as a disease was too good to go away. First, with the hypersthenic and asthenic diseases of the nineteenth century, then railway spine, whiplash, thoracic outlet syndrome, and now brachial plexus irritation, we detect the same pattern: patients with symptoms, but no objective evidence of nerve disease. Nervous irritation has repeatedly served this purpose for the last 200 years. It is our intent that bringing an understanding of this trend will encourage current clinicians and researchers to appreciate the need to abandon this form of speculation without historical insight when dealing with today's controversial syndromes.