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Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemiology and Treatment Considerations. Renee R. Taylor, Ph.D. University of Illinois at Chicago. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Current US Case Criteria (Fukuda et al., 1994) Development sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control. CFS Criteria.
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Chronic Fatigue SyndromeEpidemiology and Treatment Considerations Renee R. Taylor, Ph.D. University of Illinois at Chicago
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Current US Case Criteria (Fukuda et al., 1994) Development sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control
CFS Criteria Persistent or relapsing fatigue of 6 months or longer duration with other known medical and primary psychiatric conditions excluded by clinical diagnosis
CFS Criteria (Continued) • clinically evaluated, unexplained, persistent or relapsing chronic fatigue that is of new or definite onset (i.e., not life-long) • fatigue is not the result of ongoing exertion
CFS Criteria (Continued) Concurrent occurrence of four or more of the following: 1. Short term memory/concentration Persistent or recurring impairment in short term memory or concentration severe enough to cause substantial reductions in previous levels of occupational , educational, social, or personal activities
CFS Criteria (Continued) 2. sore throat 3. tender cervical or axillary lymph nodes 4. muscle pain 5. joint pain in multiple joints without joint swelling or redness
CFS Criteria (Continued) 6. headaches of a new type, pattern or severity 7. unrefreshing sleep 8. post exertional malaise lasting more than 24 hrs
History of CFS • Neurasthenia coined in 1869 by George Beard. • One of the most prevalent diagnoses in the late 1800’s. • Herbert James Hall (a physician and one of the founders of occupational therapy) treated patients with neurasthenia. • By the early 1900’s the diagnosis was used less frequently and it is possible that those with severe fatigue were considered to have depression or another psychiatric condition.
History of CFS • Cluster outbreaks of unexplained fatiguing illnesses have been documented throughout the world for the past 45 years (e.g., icelandic disease, epidemic neuromyalsthenia, chronic encephalomyelitis). • Patterns of associated symptoms have differed and differed from modern case criteria. • Further controlled investigations of so-called cluster outbreaks were not confirmed (Fukuda et al., 1997).
Conditions That Can Explain Chronic Fatigue • Cancer • Narcolepsy • Sleep apnea • Severe obesity • Hypothyroidism • Alcohol or substance abuse • Unresolved hepatitis B or C
Lupus Tuberculosis Lyme disease Multiple sclerosis Rheumatoid arthritis Iatrogenic, e.g., medication side effects HIV/AIDS Conditions That Can Explain Chronic Fatigue (Continued)
Conditions That Can Explain Chronic Fatigue (Continued) • Dementia • Schizophrenia • Bipolar disorder • Bulimia nervosa • Anorexia nervosa • Major Depression with Melancholia
Possible Causes of CFS • Infectious agents • Immunological defects • Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction (cortisol dysregulation, hypocortisolism, dysfunction in neuroendocrine-immune communication). • Orthostatic intolerance/Neurally Mediated Hypotension • Biopsychosical
Epidemiology Findings from the Jason et al. (1999) Chicago Prevalence study Jason, L.A., Richman, J.A., Rademaker, A.W., Jordan, K.M., Plioplys, A.V., Taylor, R.R., McCreedy, W., Huang, C., & Plioplys, S. (1999). A community-based study of chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of Internal Medicine, 159, 2129-2137.
Myths about CFSLate 1980s and early 1990s • Patients were thought to have “Yuppie Flu” • Few minority group members • Mostly women • Well educated
Myths vs. Facts Myth: CFS is a relatively rare disorder Fact: CFS affects over 800,000 adults and adolescents in the United States (Jason et al., 1999)
Myths vs. Facts Myth: The highest prevalence of CFS is among young, affluent, white professionals Fact: Latinos have the highest prevalence; African Americans have the second highest
Race • Latinos: 726 per 100,000 (twice that of Whites/non-Latino EuroAmericans) • Whites: 318 per 100,000 • African Americans: 337 per 100,000
Gender • Women have a much higher rate of CFS than men • 522 women per 100,000 compared to 291 men per 100,000
Social Loss 100% report disruption in relationships Job/Income Loss 76% Unemployment Median Income Loss: $13,000 CFS in Context CFS Immunological Neurological Gastrointestinal Musculoskeletal Endocrinological Psychiatric Socio- political Stigma Mass Media CDC Misappropriating Research Funds Health Care Stigma 77% report negative interactions with health care providers
Four Models of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Etiology Chronic Fatigue Syndrome PSYCHIATRIC BIOLOGIC SOCIAL - BIO- CFS is a form of PSYCHOSOCIAL ENVIRONMENT The validity of CFS is Relational synergy Negative contacts, somatic depression supported by Patho physiology multiple roles between all factors or hypo chondriasis
Is CFS a Distinct Entity? Findings from the Taylor et al. (2001) study Taylor, R.R., Jason, L.A., & Schoeny, M. (2001). Latent variable models of functional somatic distress in a community-based sample. Journal of Mental Health, 10, 335-349.
CFS: A Distinct Diagnostic Entity? QUESTION: • Debate regarding whether CFS differs from somatic depression, somatic anxiety, fibromyalgia, and irritable bowel syndrome. • Are these disorders better explained as a single unitary construct of functional somatic distress (somatoform disorders)? METHOD: • Tested one-, two- and five-factor solutions using confirmatory factor analysis • Used factor scores to predict actual diagnostic outcomes in logistic regression
The Current Status of Trauma Research • While many have speculated that histories of childhood sexual, physical, or emotional abuse may play a role in the etiology or course of CFS, few rigorous empirical studies have been conducted.
Prior Studies • Rosenthal (1996). 27 physician-diagnosed participants with CFS responded to a survey query in The CFIDS Chronicle. • 100% reported a history of severe or prolonged stress or repeated traumatic events. • 67% reported comorbid diagnosis of PTSD • 74% felt that stress or trauma contributed to the development of CFS
Prior Studies • Tiersky et al. (1998) compared the occurrence of childhood trauma in individuals with CFS and healthy controls. • Individuals with CFS demonstrated a higher incidence of extreme illness or injury prior to age 17. • No other significant group differences related to abuse history were found.
Prior Studies • Doyle et al. (1999) conducted a large-scale study of domestic violence and sexual abuse history among women physicians. • There was a significantly higher rate of CFS among physicians reporting a history of domestic violence (16.1%) as compared with physicians not reporting such history (3.5%).
Prior Studies • Doyle et al. (1999) did not detect significant differences in rates of CFS among physicians reporting a lifetime history of sexual abuse.