ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Conditions > Other Conditions > More Conditions > Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Text Size   Plus   Minus   |   Print   |   Email  

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Tired All the Time

By Kerry Ludlam

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a state of fatigue lasting six months or longer and is a term given to a variety of debilitating disorders whose cause in uncertain. When a patient has symptoms of fatigue and the doctor suspects CFS, the tests begin – physical exam, blood tests, urine tests, a mental status exam and a fatigue or symptom inventory. Yet the results of all those tests don’t definitively diagnose CFS; instead, they help exclude other conditions.

If it’s not mononucleosis, multiple sclerosis, kidney disease or an autoimmune disease, and you’ve had fatigue for 6 months or longer, you might have CFS. “Might” is the important word, though. Even when handed a diagnosis of CFS, the nagging feeling that it could be something else lingers.

“The symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) have been compared to having a flulike illness,” says Lucinda Bateman, MD, director of the Fatigue Consultation Clinic in Salt Lake City. “Weakness, exhaustion, achy muscles and joints, tender lymph nodes, feverishness, headache, dizziness and feeling too sick to be active or even sleep restfully are common,” she says.

The problem is that many of those symptoms are shared by other conditions, including arthritis. Like many people with an arthritis diagnosis, people with CFS may look perfectly fine. But unlike arthritis, there are no damaged tissues to see on X-ray or MRI and no elevated levels of cytokines or biomarkers to detect in the blood. And that makes diagnosing the condition very difficult. 

In the future, understanding, diagnosing and treating CFS may improve now that recent research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta showed CFS is associated with three genes that affect the body’s ability to handle stress.

“This research is validation to people who have CFS  that it’s not all ‘in their heads,’ and to the medical and scientific communities that a detectable biologic basis for CFS exists,” says Suzanne Vernon, PhD, a researcher with the Molecular Epidemiology Program at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Common DNA variations in genes, called polymorphisms, that are important in the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis were the ones associated with CFS in the study,” she says.

The HPA axis is part of the neuroendocrine system – the brain, nerves and hormones that control stress and mood, the immune system, digestion, use of energy and sexuality. The genetic variations, along with environmental influences, may make the HPA axis less efficient in responding to stress and trigger CFS in some people.

Page 1 | 2

mary schlichtman
02 Sep 2010, 10:17
I RECENTLY READ IN ARTHRITIS TODAY, AND ARTICLE WHICH DESCRIBES A NEW TEST FOR POSITIVELY IDENTIFYING CFS. COULD YOU REFER ME TO THAT PARTICULAR ITEM, OR SEND ME THE LINK TO READ IT MYSELF.? THANK YOU
heidi holland
01 Mar 2010, 11:07
i am so tired.i can hardly go.to walk more than 10 feed is very exosting. my doctor ignors me.
Kit Kellison
15 Feb 2010, 18:34
The "syndrome" in chronic fatigue syndrome means there is no known etiology for the symptoms experienced.

I was told I had either fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue symdrome for more than a decade because my thyroid disease was excluded by the TSH test. Had my family doctors understood the many reasons that the TSH levels (hormones produced by the pituitary gland) won't reflect thyroid disease, they might have checked my actual thyroid hormone blood levels with the free T3 and free T4 tests (one checked my total T4, which is an out-dated test). Failing that, they could have checked my antibody levels which, when finally checked, were extremely high.

I urge anyone with CFS or FM symptoms, or dementia symptoms, for that matter, to demand the Free T3 and Free T4 as well as thyroid antibody tests before they submit to these unhelpful diagnoses which have very dismal outcomes, especially if misdiagnosed.

Your doctor will tell you TSH is very sensitive...and yes, it is very sensitive for thyroid stimulating hormone...it misses, however, a LOT of thyroid disease.
Petite Fleur
05 Jan 2010, 09:59
I'm not sure I agree that CFS is just a diagnosis of exclusion. I was diagnosed and treated by one of the top CFS specialists while concurrently being diagnosed with fibromyalgia and mixed autoimmune disease.

At the time I felt simply that I had been hit by a truck, but over the years I have come to be able to distinguish various symptoms as belonging to one syndrome or another, so that I know if it's the CFS, FMS, or lupus that is flaring.

Anyone else have this overlap?
Denise M Kunce
06 Jun 2009, 16:57
You may look at the www.cfids.org.

Feel free to email me if you have any questions
Paula Y Smith
11 May 2009, 23:32
where can I get help to find out if I have cfs Ihave always been tired and sickly even when I was a child. I have all these symtoms but I also haave arth.can one have both. I think my sisers and aunts have this also my mom was the same way

Leave a Comment

The comment function provides the opportunity to comment on the content above.

General comments or questions to Arthritis Today editors and medical experts can be submitted here. Past medical questions and answers are available here.

Promotion of products and services and other inappropriate comments are prohibited and will be removed. If you spot one of these before we do, please send an alert.

All fields are required but only your name and comment will be displayed. Your e-mail address will not be used for any other purpose.

Name:
Email:
Text:

ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement