| 26 |
Article A Pilot Study Employing Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in the Treatment of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. 1999
Himmel PB, Seligman TM. · Department of Pharmacology, University of Rhode Island. · J Clin Rheumatol. · Pubmed #19078357 No free full text.
Abstract: Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) frequently associate the disease onset with a period of high physical and/or emotional stress. Alterations in hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal axis (HPA) function have been demonstrated. Although Cortisol production in patients with CFS has proven to be low, Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) production has not been measured. DHEA output may be altered in this population. The purpose of this uncontrolled, prospective, 6 month study of 23 white women, ages 35-55 was to identify CFS patients with suboptimal serum levels of DHEA-sulphate (DHEA-S), defined as DHEA-S <2.0mug/mL, and to treat those patients with oral DHEA. DHEA-S levels were re-measured after 4-6 weeks of oral DHEA therapy (25 mg). If DHEA-S remained <2.0mug/ mL, or if no clinical response was achieved after 4-6 weeks of therapy, then an increased dose of DHEA was given. Physical and psychological impairment and disability status were measured by the MHAQII before DHEA intervention and at 3-month intervals. Of initially screened patients with CFS, 76% (116 of 153) were ages 35-55, and 89% (103 of 116) had suboptimal (<2.0mug/mL) production of DHEA-S.Supplementation with DHEA to CFS patients lead to a significant reduction in the symptoms of CFS: pain (improved by 18%, p = 0.035), fatigue (decreased by 21%, p = 0.009)), activities of daily living (improved by 8.5%, p = 0.058), helplessness (decreased by 11%, p = 0.015), anxiety (decreased by 35%, p < 0.01), thinking (improved by 26%, p < 0.01), memory (improved by 17%, p < 0.05), and sexual problems (improved by 22%, p = 0.06) over the period of the trial. Further study is necessary to determine the safety and efficacy of supplementation of DHEA to this population in a controlled setting.
|
| 27 |
Article Co-occurrence of binge eating disorder with psychiatric and medical disorders. 2008
Javaras KN, Pope HG, Lalonde JK, Roberts JL, Nillni YI, Laird NM, Bulik CM, Crow SJ, McElroy SL, Walsh BT, Tsuang MT, Rosenthal NR, Hudson JI. · Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass., USA. · J Clin Psychiatry. · Pubmed #18348600 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Prior studies suggest that certain psychiatric and medical disorders co-occur with binge eating disorder (BED). However, there has been no large, community-based study with diagnoses made by clinician interviewers. We used data from that type of study to assess the co-occurrence of various psychiatric and medical disorders with DSM-IV BED and with subthreshold BED. METHOD: From October 2002 to July 2004, we interviewed 150 probands with BED, 150 probands without BED, and 888 of their first-degree relatives (135 of whom had BED, and 54 of whom met specific partial criteria for BED that we defined as subthreshold BED). Study participants were interviewed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV to assess BED and other psychiatric disorders and a supplemental structured interview to assess certain medical disorders; participants also completed a self-report questionnaire, the Bad Things Scale. For each psychiatric and medical disorder, we calculated the age- and sex-adjusted co-occurrence odds ratio: the odds of having that disorder in one's lifetime among individuals with (full or subthreshold) lifetime BED compared to individuals without lifetime BED. We also used subjects' responses to the Bad Things Scale to adjust for adversity over-reporting, a type of response bias that could result in spurious findings of co-occurrence. RESULTS: Full BED co-occurred significantly with bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, bulimia nervosa but not anorexia nervosa, most anxiety disorders, substance use disorders, body dysmorphic disorder, kleptomania, irritable bowel syndrome, and fibromyalgia. These results changed little after correcting for adversity over-reporting. Subthreshold BED co-occurred significantly with many, but not all, of the significantly co-occurring disorders for full BED. CONCLUSION: BED and, to a lesser degree, subthreshold BED exhibit substantial lifetime co-occurrence with psychiatric and medical disorders.
|
| 28 |
Article Orthostatic panic attacks among Vietnamese refugees. 2007
Hinton DE, Hinton L, Tran M, Nguyen M, Nguyen L, Hsia C, Pollack MH. · Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Psychiatry, Boston 02114, USA. · Transcult Psychiatry. · Pubmed #18089637 No free full text.
Abstract: Viewed historically and cross-culturally, orthostatic-induced dizziness, i.e., dizziness caused by standing up from a sitting or a lying position, forms a key aspect of many syndromes: irritable heart (American Civil War), effort syndrome (World War I and World War II), chronic fatigue syndrome (contemporary USA), Gulf War syndrome (contemporary USA), and orthostatic dysregulation (contemporary Japan). Among Vietnamese refugees attending a psychiatric clinic, this study documents a high rate of orthostatic panic (OP), as well as certain processes seemingly generating these panic attacks, viz., flashbacks and culturally specific catastrophic cognitions. Case examples are used to demonstrate OP's phenomenology and relevance to clinical care. To illustrate the mechanisms producing OP, we adduce the multiplex model of panic generation. Culturally appropriate care of Vietnamese refugees should include assessment and treatment of OP.
|
| 29 |
Article Opinion: pseudoscientific explanations of arm pain. 2007
Ring D, McCarthy M. · Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, ACC 525, 15 Parkman St., Boston, MA 02114, USA. · J Surg Orthop Adv. · Pubmed #17963652 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
|
| 30 |
Article The pain of fibromyalgia syndrome is due to muscle hypoperfusion induced by regional vasomotor dysregulation. 2007
Katz DL, Greene L, Ali A, Faridi Z. · Yale Prevention Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, 130 Division Street, Derby, CT 06418, USA. · Med Hypotheses. · Pubmed #17376601 No free full text.
Abstract: Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a condition of chronic muscle pain and fatigue of unknown etiology and pathogenesis. There is limited support for the various hypotheses espoused to account for the manifestations of FMS, including immunogenic, endocrine, and neurological mechanisms. Treatment, partially effective at best, is directed toward symptomatic relief without the benefit of targeting known, underlying pathology. A noteworthy commonality among partially effective therapies is a vasodilatory effect. This is true both of conventional treatments, unconventional treatments such as intravenous micronutrient therapy, and lifestyle treatments, specifically graduated exercise. The pain of fibromyalgia is described in terms suggestive of the pain in muscles following extreme exertion and anaerobic metabolism. Taken together, these characteristics suggest that the pain could be induced by vasomotor dysregulation, and vasoconstriction in muscle, leading to low-level ischemia and its metabolic sequelae. Vasodilatory influences, including physical activity, relieve the pain of FMS by increasing muscle perfusion. There are some preliminary data consistent with this hypothesis, and nothing known about FMS that refutes it. The hypothesis that the downstream cause of FMS symptoms is muscle hypoperfusion due to regional vasomotor dysregulation has clear implications for treatment; is testable with current technology; and should be investigated.
|
| 31 |
Article Highlights from 5th International Conference on HHV-6 and -7. 2006
Komaroff AL, Jacobson S, Ablashi DV, Yamanishi K. · Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. · Herpes. · Pubmed #17147913 No free full text.
Abstract: This article reports on key presentations at the 5th International Conference on Human Herpesvirus (HHV)-6 and -7, organized by the HHV-6 Foundation. New assays for HHV-6 and -7 promise to be more accurate and better able to distinguish between HHV-6A and B or differentiate active from latent infection. Nevertheless, more research is needed to enhance the sensitivity and specificity of these assays. Cellular receptors for both HHV-6 and -7 have been identified. Both viruses have in vitro tropism for neurons and dendritic cells of the central nervous system (CNS), and their role in producing CNS disease in the immunocompromised (particularly transplant recipients and the HIV-infected) is well established. HHV-6 may enhance the progression of simian immunodeficiency virus in monkeys, as suggested by in vivo data. In immunocompetent children and adults, HHV-6 and/or -7 may play a role in triggering and perpetuating several diseases of the nervous system, namely encephalitis, multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome and epilepsy.
|
| 32 |
Article Illnesses you have to fight to get: facts as forces in uncertain, emergent illnesses. 2006
Dumit J. · Program in Science, Technology & Society, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, E51-296D MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139-4307, USA. · Soc Sci Med. · Pubmed #16085344 No free full text.
Abstract: Chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple chemical sensitivity are two clusters of illnesses that are pervaded by medical, social and political uncertainty. This article examines how facts are talked about and experienced in struggles over these emergent, contested illnesses in the US. Based principally on a large archive of internet newsgroup postings, and also on fieldwork and on published debates, it finds that (1) sufferers describe their experiences of being denied healthcare and legitimacy through bureaucratic categories of exclusion as dependent upon their lack of biological facts; (2) institutions manage these exclusions rhetorically through exploiting the open-endedness of science to deny efficacy to new facts; (3) collective patient action responds by archiving the systematic nature of these exclusions and developing counter-tactics. The result is the maintenance of these very expensive struggles for all involved.
|
| 33 |
Article Lymphocyte subset differences in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple sclerosis and major depression. free! 2005
Robertson MJ, Schacterle RS, Mackin GA, Wilson SN, Bloomingdale KL, Ritz J, Komaroff AL. · Division of Hematologic Malignancies, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. · Clin Exp Immunol. · Pubmed #15996197 links to free full text
Abstract: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a heterogeneous disorder of unknown aetiology characterized by debilitating fatigue, along with other symptoms, for at least 6 months. Many studies demonstrate probable involvement of the central and autonomic nervous system, as well as a state of generalized immune activation and selective immune dysfunction in patients with CFS. The aim of this study was to compare the lymphocyte subsets of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome to those of patients with major depression and multiple sclerosis as well as those of healthy control subjects. No differences were found in total numbers of T cells, B cells or natural killer (NK) cells. However, differences were found in T, B and NK cell subsets. Patients with major depression had significantly fewer resting T (CD3(+)/CD25(-)) cells than the other groups. Patients with major depression also had significantly more CD20(+)/CD5(+) B cells, a subset associated with the production of autoantibodies. Compared to patients with multiple sclerosis, patients with CFS had greater numbers of CD16(+)/CD3(-) NK cells. Further study will be required to determine whether these alterations in lymphocyte subsets are directly involved in the pathophysiology of these disorders, or are secondary effects of the causal agent(s).
|
| 34 |
Article Cytokine production and modulation: comparison of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and normal controls. 2005
Tomoda A, Joudoi T, Rabab el-M, Matsumoto T, Park TH, Miike T. · Department of Child Development, School of Medicine, Kumamoto University, Kumamoto, Japan. · Psychiatry Res. · Pubmed #15808295 No free full text.
Abstract: We studied cytokine production in 15 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and 23 controls. CFS patients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells were cultured with lipopolysaccharide or phytohemagglutinin. Enzymatic immunoassay indicated cytokine concentration in culture supernatants. CFS patients showed significantly lower mRNA levels and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) production. Cytokine dysregulation affects CFS pathogenesis. TGF-beta1 may aid treatment because it affects CFS inflammatory characteristics.
|
| 35 |
Article The association between borderline personality disorder and chronic medical illnesses, poor health-related lifestyle choices, and costly forms of health care utilization. 2004
Frankenburg FR, Zanarini MC. · Laboratory for the Study of Adult Development, McLean Hospital, Belmont, and the Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02478, USA. · J Clin Psychiatry. · Pubmed #15641871 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The physical health of patients with borderline personality disorder has not been well studied. The purpose of this study was to compare the physical health, lifestyle choices affecting physical health, and health care utilization of patients with remitted and nonremitted borderline personality disorder. METHOD: 200 patients who no longer met the Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines (DIB-R) and DSM-III-R criteria for borderline personality disorder and 64 patients who still met study criteria for borderline personality disorder were interviewed from June 1992 through December 2001 concerning their physical health, lifestyle choices, and use of medical care 6 years after their initial participation in a larger study of the longitudinal course of borderline personality disorder. RESULTS: Remitted borderline patients were found to be significantly less likely than non-remitted borderline patients to have a history of a "syndrome-like" condition (i.e., chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, or temporomandibular joint syndrome) (p = .049) or to have a history of obesity (p = .026), osteoarthritis (p = .025), diabetes (p = .001), hypertension (p = .028), back pain (p < .001), or urinary incontinence (p < .001). They were also found to be significantly less likely to report pack per day smoking (p = .002), daily consumption of alcohol (p = .003), lack of regular exercise (p = .006), daily use of sleep medications (p < .001), and sustained use of pain medications (p = .026). In addition, remitted borderline patients were significantly less likely than nonremitted borderline patients to have had at least 1 medically related emergency room visit (p < .001), 1 medical hospitalization (p = .003), or 1 of each (p< .001). CONCLUSIONS: The failure to remit from borderline personality disorder seems to be associated with a heightened risk of suffering from chronic physical conditions, making poor health-related lifestyle choices, and using costly forms of medical services.
|
| 36 |
Article A comparison of pregnancies that occur before and after the onset of chronic fatigue syndrome. free! 2004
Schacterle RS, Komaroff AL. · Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachasetts 02115, USA. · Arch Intern Med. · Pubmed #14980991 links to free full text
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Many women with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) fear that pregnancy will worsen their condition, increase the risks of maternal complications of pregnancy, or threaten the health of their offspring. Little empirical evidence, however, has been published on this matter. METHODS: A detailed questionnaire was administered to 86 women regarding 252 pregnancies that occurred before or after the onset of CFS and the outcomes of these pregnancies were observed. RESULTS: During pregnancy, there was no change in CFS symptoms in 29 (41%), an improvement of symptoms in 21 (30%), and a worsening of symptoms in 20 (29%) of 70 subjects. After pregnancy, there was no change in CFS symptoms in 21 (30%), an improvement of symptoms in 14 (20%), and a worsening of symptoms in 35 (20%) of the subjects. The rates of many complications were similar in pregnancies occurring before the onset and in those occurring after the onset of CFS. There was a higher frequency of spontaneous abortions in the pregnancies occurring after, vs before, the onset of CFS (22 [30%] of 73 pregnancies after vs 13 [8%] of 171 before; P<.001), but no differences in the rates of other complications. Developmental delays or learning disabilities were reported more often in the offspring of women who became pregnant after, vs before, the onset of CFS (9 [21%] of 43 children vs 11 [8%] of 139 children; P =.01). CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy did not consistently worsen the symptoms of CFS. Most maternal and infant outcomes were not systematically worse in pregnancies occurring after the onset of CFS. The higher rates of spontaneous abortions and of developmental delays in offspring that we observed could be explained by maternal age or parity differences, and should be investigated by larger, prospective studies with control populations.
|
| 37 |
Article Mark Twain and his family's health: Livy Clemens' neurasthenia in the gilded age and chronic fatigue syndrome of today. 2003
Arcari R, Crombie HD. · Department of Community Medicine and Healthcare, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, USA. · Conn Med. · Pubmed #12802844 No free full text.
Abstract: Our purpose is to compare and contrast the 19th century diagnosis and disease neurasthenia with the contemporary illness known as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. The health of Mark Twain's wife, Olivia (Livy) Clemens, will then be discussed and evaluated with respect to these two medical conditions.
|
| 38 |
Article Review: cognitive behavioural interventions may be effective for chronic fatigue syndrome and chronic back pain. free! 2003
Hofmann SG. · Department of Psychology, Boston University, Massachusetts, USA. · Evid Based Ment Health. · Pubmed #12719362 links to free full text
This publication has no abstract.
|
| 39 |
Article Sleep and chronic pain: challenges to the alpha-EEG sleep pattern as a pain specific sleep anomaly. 2003
Rains JC, Penzien DB. · Center for Sleep Evaluation, Elliot Hospital, One Elliot Way, Manchester, NH 03102, USA. · J Psychosom Res. · Pubmed #12505558 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The alpha-EEG sleep anomaly has been associated with chronic benign pain syndromes. Although controversial, the anomaly is believed by some to be an important biologic correlate of certain otherwise poorly explained painful conditions (e.g., fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome). To shed further light on this phenomenon, this study compared the sleep and psychological characteristics of chronic pain patients who exhibited the alpha-EEG sleep anomaly with pain-free psychiatric and medical patients who also were found to exhibit the alpha-EEG anomaly. METHODS: The alpha-EEG sleep was identified in the polysomnographic records of 5% of over 1000 consecutive sleep patients. Objective sleep parameters, daytime sleepiness and psychological characteristics (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory [MMPI] scores) of patients exhibiting this anomaly were examined. RESULTS: The alpha-EEG anomaly was identified in only 5% of the total patient sample. Patients with the alpha-EEG anomaly could be further classified into three diagnostic subgroups: chronic pain, psychiatric and other medical/sleep disorders, The subgroups were compared on sleep parameters and psychological characteristics. Less than 40% of the patients exhibiting the alpha-EEG anomaly experienced chronic pain. Chronic pain patients evidenced disturbed sleep patterns and psychological characteristics that were for the most part similar to those observed in some pain-free medical and psychiatric patients. Only the medical subgroup exhibited objective daytime sleepiness. The alpha-EEG sleep disturbance was not accounted for by psychological characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: These findings challenge the notion that alpha-EEG sleep is of direct etiological significance in producing the pain complaint among patients with chronic pain since the alpha-EEG sleep was not a sufficient condition for pain.
|
| 40 |
Article Macrophagic myofasciitis: a summary of Dr. Gherardi's presentations. 2002
Brenner A. · Rhevmatological Services, Inc., Framington, MA 01702, USA. · Vaccine. · Pubmed #12184366 No free full text.
Abstract: Dr. R.K. Gherardi presented two papers at the symposium, detailing his researches into a proposed new clinical entity which he has entitled Macrophagic Myofasciitis (MMF). In his first paper he described the histopathologic and immunologic characteristics of the condition, and in the second, the clinical and serologic features. Dr. Gherardi believes that MMF, a syndrome of ascending myalgias, fatigue and diffuse musculoskeletal pain, may be related to a chronic immune response to aluminum granulomas persisting at the sites of prior immunization with aluminum adjuvated vaccines.
|
| 41 |
Article Risk factors for multisymptom illness in US Army veterans of the Gulf War. 2002
Wolfe J, Proctor SP, Erickson DJ, Hu H. · Women's Health Sciences Division, National Center for PTSD, Boston Environmental Hazards Center, 150 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, USA. · J Occup Environ Med. · Pubmed #11911029 No free full text.
Abstract: This research study examined the prevalence of symptoms and identified risk factors for reported symptoms among a group of Army Gulf War (GW) veterans. A survey was mailed to all members of the Ft. Devens cohort in 1997, representing the third assessment of a group that consisted of 2949 US Army soldiers deployed to the Gulf, and was studied initially in 1991. A total of 1290 subjects responded to the mailed survey; aggressive follow-up methods to address non-response bias were employed. Subjects were classified as having multisymptom illness if they reported symptoms from at least two of three symptom categories (fatigue, mood-cognition, musculoskeletal). Sixty percent of the respondents met criteria for multisymptom illness. Female gender, lower levels of education, psychological symptoms, self-reported use of a medical clinic in the Gulf, ingestion of anti-nerve gas pills (pyridostigmine bromide), anthrax vaccination, tent heaters, exposure to oil fire smoke, and chemical odors were significantly related to multisymptom illness in logistic regression analyses. Analyses in which subjects were stratified by level of psychological symptoms revealed different sets of GW-service environmental exposures and suggest that subgroups of GW veterans may have different sets of risk factors.
|
| 42 |
Article Blood volume and its relation to peak O(2) consumption and physical activity in patients with chronic fatigue. free! 2002
Farquhar WB, Hunt BE, Taylor JA, Darling SE, Freeman R. · Center for Autonomic and Peripheral Nerve Disorders, Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA. · Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. · Pubmed #11748048 links to free full text
Abstract: Individuals with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) experience a number of somatic complaints including severe, disabling fatigue, and exercise intolerance. We hypothesized that hypovolemia, through its interaction with central hemodynamics, would contribute to the exercise intolerance associated with this disorder. We examined blood volume, peak aerobic power, habitual physical activity, fatigue level, and their interrelations to understand the physiological basis of this disorder. Seventeen patients who met the Centers for Disease Control criteria for CFS and 17 age-matched controls participated in the study. Blood volume was assessed using a single bolus injection of Evans blue dye. Peak oxygen consumption was measured during exercise on an upright cycle ergometer. Supine cardiac output and stroke volumes were measured using CO(2) rebreathing. Questionnaires were used to assess habitual physical activity and fatigue. Patients displayed a trend for a 9% lower blood volume (58.3 +/- 2.1 vs. 64.2 +/- 2.5 ml/kg, P = 0.084) and had a 35% lower peak oxygen consumption (22.0 +/- 1.2 vs. 33.6 +/- 1.9 ml/kg, P < 0.001). These two variables were highly related within the patients (r = 0.835, P < 0.001) and the controls (r = 0.850, P < 0.001). Peak ventilation and habitual physical activity were significantly lower in the patients. Fatigue level was not related to any of the measured physiological parameters within the CFS group. In conclusion, individuals with CFS have a significantly lower peak oxygen consumption and an insignificant trend toward lower blood volume compared with controls. These variables were highly related in both subject groups, indicating that blood volume is a strong physiological correlate of peak oxygen consumption in patients with CFS.
|
| 43 |
Article [Occupational stress, suicide and fatigue depression] 2001
Ferrada-Noli M. · Folkhälsovetenskap med inriktning mot epidemiologi, Högskolan i Gävle. · Lakartidningen. · Pubmed #11478215 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
|
| 44 |
Article Neuropsychological function in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple sclerosis, and depression. 2001
Daly E, Komaroff AL, Bloomingdale K, Wilson S, Albert MS. · Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, 149 13th Street, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA. · Appl Neuropsychol. · Pubmed #11388119 No free full text.
Abstract: Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), multiple sclerosis (MS), and major depression were compared with controls and with each other on a neuropsychological battery that included standard neuropsychological tests and a computerized set of tasks that spanned the same areas of ability. A total of 101 participants were examined, including 29 participants with CFS, 24 with MS, 23 with major depressive disorder, and 25 healthy controls. There were significant differences among the groups in 3 out of 5 cognitive domains: memory, language, and spatial ability. Assessment of psychiatric symptoms indicated that all 3 patient groups had a higher prevalence of depression than the controls. A total measure of psychiatric symptomatology also differentiated the patients from the controls. After covarying the cognitive test scores by a measure of depression, the patient groups continued to differ from controls primarily in the area of memory. The findings support the view that the cognitive deficits found in CFS cannot be attributed solely to the presence of depressive symptomatology in the patients.
|
| 45 |
Article Chemical sensitivity and chronic fatigue in Gulf War veterans: a brief report. 2001
Proctor SP, Heaton KJ, White RF, Wolfe J. · Boston Environmental Hazards Center (116B-4), 150 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130-4893, USA. · J Occup Environ Med. · Pubmed #11285874 No free full text.
Abstract: The foci of this brief report are to (1) describe the prevalence of chemical sensitivity (CS) and chronic fatigue (CF) symptomatology and of presumptive multiple CS and CF syndrome diagnoses, and (2) explore the potential overlap between one purported case definition (i.e., chronic multi-symptom illness) and these unexplained symptom syndromes in a well-characterized group of Gulf War veterans. The number of subjects with CS and CF symptomatology and presumptive multiple CS and CF syndrome diagnoses was higher in the Gulf War-deployed group compared with a group deployed to Germany during the Gulf War. However, the percent differences were not significant when comparing the presumptive diagnoses of multiple CS and CF syndrome. The characteristic differences between the groups and the overlap with chronic multi-symptom illness are also discussed.
|
| 46 |
Article Circadian rhythms of women with fibromyalgia. free! 2001
Klerman EB, Goldenberg DL, Brown EN, Maliszewski AM, Adler GK. · Endocrine-Hypertension Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. · J Clin Endocrinol Metab. · Pubmed #11238482 links to free full text
Abstract: Fibromyalgia syndrome is a chronic and debilitating disorder characterized by widespread nonarticular musculoskeletal pain whose etiology is unknown. Many of the symptoms of this syndrome, including difficulty sleeping, fatigue, malaise, myalgias, gastrointestinal complaints, and decreased cognitive function, are similar to those observed in individuals whose circadian pacemaker is abnormally aligned with their sleep-wake schedule or with local environmental time. Abnormalities in melatonin and cortisol, two hormones whose secretion is strongly influenced by the circadian pacemaker, have been reported in women with fibromyalgia. We studied the circadian rhythms of 10 women with fibromyalgia and 12 control healthy women. The protocol controlled factors known to affect markers of the circadian system, including light levels, posture, sleep-wake state, meals, and activity. The timing of the events in the protocol were calculated relative to the habitual sleep-wake schedule of each individual subject. Under these conditions, we found no significant difference between the women with fibromyalgia and control women in the circadian amplitude or phase of rhythms of melatonin, cortisol, and core body temperature. The average circadian phases expressed in hours posthabitual bedtime for women with and without fibromyalgia were 3:43 +/- 0:19 and 3:46 +/- 0:13, respectively, for melatonin; 10:13 +/- 0:23 and 10:32 +/- 0:20, respectively for cortisol; and 5:19 +/- 0:19 and 4:57 +/- 0:33, respectively, for core body temperature phases. Both groups of women had similar circadian rhythms in self-reported alertness. Although pain and stiffness were significantly increased in women with fibromyalgia compared with healthy women, there were no circadian rhythms in either parameter. We suggest that abnormalities in circadian rhythmicity are not a primary cause of fibromyalgia or its symptoms.
|
| 47 |
Article Salivary gland changes in chronic fatigue syndrome: a case-controlled preliminary histologic study. 2000
Woo SB, Schacterle RS, Komaroff AL, Gallagher GT. · Dept of Oral Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, USA. · Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod. · Pubmed #10884641 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this preliminary study is to compare labial salivary gland changes of 11 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome with control subjects. STUDY DESIGN: Changes in labial salivary glands were graded from 0 to 3+ for acinar dilatation, ductal dilatation, periductal fibrosis, plasmacytic infiltrate, lymphocytic infiltrate, mast cell infiltrate, and lymphocytic aggregates or foci. RESULTS: Four of the 11 subjects had 2+ to 3+ changes in at least 4 of the 7 parameters examined. Only the presence of mast cells was statistically significant between the 2 groups. Two of these 4 patients had 1 lymphocytic focus per 4 mm(2) of tissue. CONCLUSIONS: The salivary gland changes in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome show varying degrees of ductal and acinar dilatation, periductal fibrosis, lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates, and occasional lymphocytic foci, all suggestive of primary gland damage. The one parameter that showed statistical significance was the presence of mast cells (Fisher exact test, 0.0125).
|
| 48 |
Article Symptom patterns in long-duration chronic fatigue syndrome. 2000
Friedberg F, Dechene L, McKenzie MJ, Fontanetta R. · Department of Mathematics, Fitchburg State College, MA, USA. · J Psychosom Res. · Pubmed #10750631 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to evaluate symptom patterns in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) who were ill for 10 or more years. METHODS: This cross-sectional self-report study compared patient groups with long-duration (median = 18 years; n = 258) and short-duration (median = 3 years; n = 28) CFS to a group of healthy significant others (n = 79) on symptomatic, neurocognitive, and psychological variables. Data were gathered from a 574-item postal questionnaire. RESULTS: A principal-components analysis of CFS symptom data yielded a three-factor solution: cognitive problems; flu-like symptoms; and neurologic symptoms. Compared with the short-duration CFS group, the long-duration group had significantly higher CFS symptom severity scores (p < 0.04), largely attributable to increased cognitive difficulties. A subgroup comparison of subjects ill for < 3 years versus those ill 4-7 years suggested that denial coping strategies were more likely in those participants with the shorter illness duration. Significant differences between both CFS groups and healthy controls were found in a number of comorbid disorders. Participants with CFS most often endorsed immune/viral abnormalities and persistent stress as important perceived causes of their illness. CONCLUSION: Participants with long-duration CFS reported a large number of specific cognitive difficulties that were greater in severity than those reported by participants with short-duration CFS. The pattern of comorbid disorders in the CFS groups was consistent with hypersensitivity and viral reactivation hypotheses.
|
| 49 |
Article Acute phase responses and cytokine secretion in chronic fatigue syndrome. 1999
Cannon JG, Angel JB, Ball RW, Abad LW, Fagioli L, Komaroff AL. · Department of Medicine, New England Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, USA. · J Clin Immunol. · Pubmed #10634215 No free full text.
Abstract: This study addresses the hypothesis that clinical manifestations of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) are due in part to abnormal production of or sensitivity to cytokines such as interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and IL-6 under basal conditions or in response to a particular physical stress: 15 min of exercise consisting of stepping up and down on a platform adjusted to the height of the patella. The study involved 10 CFS patients and 11 age-, sex-, and activity-matched controls: of these, 6 patients and 4 controls were tested in both the follicular and the luteal phases of the menstrual cycle, and the remainder were tested in only one phase, for a total of 31 experimental sessions. Prior to exercise, plasma concentrations of the acute phase reactant alpha2-macroglobulin were 29% higher in CFS patients (P < 0.008) compared to controls. Secretion of IL-6 was generally higher for CFS patients (approximately 38%), however, this difference was statistically significant only if all values over a 3-day period were analyzed by repeated-measures ANOVA (P = 0.035). IL-6 secretion correlated with plasma alpha2-macroglobulin in control subjects at rest (R = 0.767, P = 0.001). Immediately after exercise, the CFS patients reported greater ratings of perceived exertion (P=0.027) compared to the healthy control subjects. Ratings of perceived exertion correlated with IL-1beta secretion by cells from healthy control subjects (R = 0.603, P = 0.022), but not from CFS patients, and IL-1beta secretion was not different between groups. Exercise induced a slight (< 12%) but significant (P = 0.006) increase in IL-6 secretion, but the responses of the CFS patients were not different than controls. Furthermore, no significant exercise-induced changes in body temperature or plasma alpha2-macroglobulin were observed. These data indicate that under basal conditions, CFS is associated with increased IL-6 secretion which is manifested by chronically elevated plasma alpha2-macroglobulin concentrations. These modest differences suggest that cytokine dysregulation is not a singular or dominant factor in the pathogenesis of CFS.
|
| 50 |
Article Gulf War illnesses: causation and treatment. 1999
Hodgson MJ, Kipen HM. · Department of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, USA. · J Occup Environ Med. · Pubmed #10390695 No free full text.
Abstract: Soldiers returning from the Gulf War in 1991 described a range of symptoms, including some consistent with the chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and multiple chemical sensitivity. Well-defined adverse health events attributable to service in the Gulf occurred. However, controlled epidemiological studies in Gulf War veterans and controls describe significant excesses of symptoms that were not clearly associated with pathologic disease. At least 12% of veterans currently receive some form of disability from the Department of Veterans Affairs. A number of reports outline theories proposed to explain the excess, but few are scientifically supported. Management guidelines for this spectrum of disorders resembles that of many of "emerging overlap syndromes," including multiple chemical sensitivity, chronic fatigue syndrome, and fibromyalgia. They include the establishment of a trusting doctor-patient relationship, negotiations around a common ground of scientific and etiologic beliefs, non-labeling of the disorder, and work toward recovery in the absence of clear etiologic answers.
|
Prior · Next |
|
|