Index

Is CFS Real?
What if CFS is a Real Disease
Is CFS a New Problem?- Historial Review




Is CFS Real?
The following is from an article in the MEssenger by M.R.Hiller dated May 1997.

The current thinking is that several viruses may play a role in triggering the illness, but there's really very little known right now about the cause.
There has been considerable controversy surrounding CFS. There are no tests that can prove an individual has the disease, so some doctors question whether it really exists. Still, most are now convinced that CFS is a REAL DISEASE and concentrated research is under way. Studies show that patients with CFS definitely show abnormalities in many areas compared to healthy people. The studies have shown a chemical in the urine of CFS patients called "aminohydroxy-Nmethylpr-rolidine"(described in the April 1996 issue of Biochemical and Molecular Medicine), a study assessing the effects of exercise on a specific arm muscle showed a significantly reduced muscle function(September 1996 issue of the Journal of Medical Virology, Neuropyschological and neuroendocrine studies and brain imaging have now confirmed the occurrence of neurobiological abnormalities, such as memory problems in most CFS patients.
A recent study compared 29 CFS patients with 25 healthy people and found significant differences in learning and memory (Septemeber 1996 issue of Biology and Psychiatry).

Other studies have reported differences between people who have CFS and those who don't in various measures of immune functions, such as white blood cell counts, serum immunoglobulin levels, allergic responses, and function of so-called "natural killer" cells, but none of the differences were consistent in all studies.

However, in a recent study at the CDC's Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, there was consistency in those measures when CFS patients were divided into groups based on whether their illness started gradually or suddenly and based on how they were feeling on the day of testing. That study was reported in the January 1997 issue of the Journal of Infectious Disease.

The answer to "Is CFS Real?" is "YES, IT'S VERY REAL!". The proof that it exists is all documented and has been acknowledged by the CDC,
the government and even the medical professionals. If that's not enough, just ask anyone with CFS and we'll tell you. We'll tell you about what we were like before CFS and how we are now. You can visit other CFS Home Pages and see what others have to say about having CFS.


WHAT IF CFS IS A REAL DISEASE?



The medical profession is skeptical of disorders it does not understand, such as CFS. "Skepticism permeates our profession."wrote Dr.Thomas L. English. "Healthy skepticism is the 'in' attitude for intelligent, discriminating physicians". Yet, Dr.English questions how healthy it is for the suffering patient "if CFS is a real disease". He asks skeptical fellow doctors: What if you are wrong? What are the consequences for your patients"?

Dr. English himself suffers from CFS, and last year JAMA published his article directed to fellow phsyicians. He invited them to put themselves in the place of the suffering patient, describing the syndrome:

"You catch 'a cold' and thereafter the quality of your life is indelibly altered. You can't think clearly . . . Sometimes it's all you can do to read the newspaper or to follow the plot of a television program. Jet lag without end. You inch along the fog-shrouded precipice of patient care, where once you walked with confidence. Myalgias [muscle aches] wander about your body with no apparent pattern. Symptoms come and go, wax and wane. . . . You too might wonder about some of your symptoms had you not talked to other patients with similar experiences . . . or talked with physicians who have seen hundreds of similar cases. . . .

"I have talked with scores of fellow patients who went to our profession for help, but who came away humiliated, angry, and afraid. Their bodies told them they were physically ill, but the psychospeculation of their physicians was only frightening and infuriating not reassuring. It told them their doctors had little understanding of the real problem. . . . Are we to believe that just because symptoms are strange and unfamiliar they cannot be real? Are we to assume that our laboratory tests are capable of screening for new diseases as well as old? Distrust of new ideas is as old as humankind; so are the harmful consequences of that distrust."--JAMA, February 27, 1991, page 964. "You catch 'a cold' and thereafter the quality of your life is indelibly altered. You can't think clearly . . . Sometimes it's all you can do to read the newspaper or to follow the plot of a television program. Jet lag without end. You inch along the fog-shrouded precipice of patient care, where once you walked with confidence. Myalgias [muscle aches] wander about your body with no apparent pattern. Symptoms come and go, wax and wane. . . . You too might wonder about some of your symptoms had you not talked to other patients with similar experiences . . . or talked with physicians who have seen hundreds of similar cases. . . .

"I have talked with scores of fellow patients who went to our profession for help, but who came away humiliated, angry, and afraid. Their bodies told them they were physically ill, but the psychospeculation of their physicians was only frightening and infuriating not reassuring. It told them their doctors had little understanding of the real problem. . . . Are we to believe that just because symptoms are strange and unfamiliar they cannot be real? Are we to assume that our laboratory tests are capable of screening for new diseases as well as old? Distrust of new ideas is as old as humankind; so are the harmful consequences of that distrust."--JAMA, February 27, 1991, page 964.


IS CFS A NEW PROBLEM?



Is this really a new clinical problem? How has it come to the public's attention?

Historical Review

An article published in the MEssenger by M.R.Hiller,
Special to the Guardian reveals the following.

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome has gone through an evolution of descriptive terms, but there is reason to believe the disease has been around for years. Symptoms and charactertistics assigned to CFS, at that time call nurasthenia, were described in 1750 by Sir Richard Manningham. There are also claims that descriptions of a similar disease were found in Hippocrates' writings.

CFS is probably not a new illness. Some have identified it with an array of symptoms that in the last century was called neurasthenia, a name drawn from the Greek denoting "lack of nerve strength." The symptoms of CFS are also similar to those of fibromyalgia, which is also known as fibrositis. Some even believe that CFS and fibromyalgia may be the same syndrome. Many outbreaks of CFS-like illnesses have been reported in previous decades, most of them in the United States. But they have also occurred in England, Iceland, Denmark, Germany, Australia, and Greece. Names to describe the syndrome were Iceland disease, Akureyri disease, Royal Free disease, and others.

More recently, in 1984 about 200 people in the small town of Incline Village, near the California- Nevada border, suffered a flulike illness that persisted. "We knew them as productive, happy, vigorous adults," explains Dr. Cheney, who treated many of them. "All of a sudden they got sick and wouldn't get well. In some cases they were sweating so much at night their spouses had to get up and change the bed sheets."

Some disparagingly called this outbreak of illness at Incline Village Yuppie flu, since middle-class, upward mobile young people were predominately affected. It was thought that patients might be suffering from acute infectious mononucleosis, but tests for that disease came up negative for most of them. Blood tests, however, did reveal high levels of antibodies to the Epstein-Barr virus, a type of herpesvirus. Thus, for a time, the illness was commonly known as chronic Epstein-Barr.

Line



If you are planning on leaving after this page, please sign my guestbook. Thanks!!

Sign My Guestbook
Sign Guestbook

Main Page
Main Page


Email Me

Main Page
Site Map






Line


All content © 1998 - 2016 by Lady Care's Realm on the Web.
All right reserved.
All other copyrights belong to their respective holders.

All graphics © 1998 - 2016 Dream Web Designs
All right reserved.
All other copyrights belong to their respective holders.

Dream Web Designs Logo
This background set made and copyrighted by Lady Care Designs.
Please do not take any of the set or the graphic.
Thank you for respecting the copyright laws.