Chronic
Fatigue No Longer Seen as Yuppie Flu
By
David
Tuller - The New York Times
For decades, people suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome
have struggled to convince doctors, employers, friends and even family members
that they were not imagining their debilitating symptoms. Skeptics called the
illness yuppie flu and shirker syndrome.
But the syndrome is now finally gaining some official respect.
The
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, which in 1999 acknowledged that it had
diverted millions of dollars allocated by Congress for chronic fatigue syndrome
research to other programs, has released studies that linked the condition to
genetic mutations and abnormalities in gene expression involved in key
physiological processes. The centers have also sponsored a $6 million public
awareness campaign about the illness. And last month, the C.D.C. released
survey data suggesting that the prevalence of the syndrome is far higher than
previously thought, although these findings have stirred controversy among
patients and scientists. Some scientists and many patients remain highly
critical of the C.D.C.s record on chronic fatigue syndrome, or C.F.S. But
nearly everyone now agrees that the syndrome is real.
People with C.F.S. are as sick and as functionally
impaired as someone with
AIDS, with
breast cancer,
with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, said Dr. William Reeves, the
lead expert on the illness at the C.D.C., who helped expose the centers
misuse of chronic fatigue financing.
Chronic fatigue syndrome was first identified as a distinct
entity in the 1980s. (A virtually identical illness had been identified in
Britain three decades earlier and called myalgic encephalomyelitis.) The
illness causes overwhelming fatigue,
sleep disorders and
other severe symptoms and afflicts more women than men. No consistent
biomarkers have been identified and no treatments have been approved for
addressing the underlying causes, although some medications provide symptomatic
relief.
Patients say the word fatigue does not begin to
describe their condition. Donna Flowers of Los Gatos, Calif., a physical
therapist and former professional figure skater, said the profound exhaustion
was unlike anything she had ever experienced.
I slept for 12 to 14 hours a day but still felt
sleep-deprived, said Ms. Flowers, 51, who fell ill several years ago
after a bout of mononucleosis. I had what we call brain fog.
I couldnt think straight, and I could barely read. I couldnt get
the energy to go out of the door. I thought I was doomed. I wanted to
die.
Studies have shown that people with the syndrome experience
abnormalities in the central and autonomic nervous systems, the immune system,
cognitive functions, the stress response pathways and other major biological
functions. Researchers believe the illness will ultimately prove to have
multiple causes, including genetic predisposition and exposure to microbial
agents, toxins and other physical and emotional traumas. Studies have linked
the onset of chronic fatigue syndrome with an acute bout of
Lyme disease, Q
fever, Ross River virus, parvovirus, mononucleosis and other infectious
diseases.
Its unlikely that this big cluster of people who fit
the symptoms all have the same triggers, said Kimberly McCleary,
president of the Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome Association of
America, the advocacy group in charge of the C.D.C.-sponsored awareness
campaign. Youre looking not just at apples and oranges but
pineapples, hot dogs and skateboards, too.
Under the most widely used case definition, a diagnosis of
chronic fatigue syndrome requires six months of unexplained fatigue as well as
four of eight other persistent symptoms: impaired memory and concentration,
sore throat, tender lymph nodes, muscle pain, joint pain, headaches, disturbed
sleeping patterns and post-exercise malaise.
The broadness of the definition has led to varying estimates of
the syndromes prevalence. Based on previous surveys, the C.D.C. has
estimated that more than a million Americans have the illness.
Last month, however, the disease control centers reported that a
randomized telephone survey in Georgia, using a less restrictive methodology to
identify cases, found that about 1 in 40 adults ages 18 to 59 met the
diagnostic criteria an estimate 6 to 10 times higher than previously
reported rates.
However, many patients and researchers fear that the expanded
prevalence rate could complicate the search for consistent findings across
patient cohorts. These critics say the new figures are greatly inflated and
include many people who are likely to be suffering not from chronic fatigue
syndrome but from psychiatric illnesses.
There are many, many conditions that are psychological in
nature that share symptoms with this illness but do not share much of the
underlying biology, said John Herd, 55, a former medical illustrator and
a C.F.S. patient for two decades.
Researchers and patient advocates have faulted other aspects of
the C.D.C.s research. Dr. Jonathan Kerr, a microbiologist and chronic
fatigue expert at St. Georges University of London, said the
C.D.C.s gene expression findings last year were rather
meaningless because they were not confirmed through more advanced
laboratory techniques. Kristin Loomis, executive director of the HHV-6
Foundation, a research advocacy group for a form of
herpes virus
that has been linked to C.F.S., said studying subsets of patients with similar
profiles was more likely to generate useful findings than Dr. Reevess
population-based approach.
Dr. Reeves responded that understanding of the disease and of
some newer research technologies is still in its infancy, so methodological
disagreements were to be expected. He defended the population-based approach as
necessary for obtaining a broad picture and replicable results. To me,
this is the usual scientific dialogue, he said.
Dr. Jose G. Montoya, a Stanford infectious disease specialist
pursuing the kind of research favored by Ms. Loomis, caused a buzz last
December when he reported remarkable improvement in 9 out of 12 patients given
a powerful antiviral medication, valganciclovir. Dr. Montoya has just begun a
randomized controlled trial of the drug, which is approved for other uses.
Dr. Montoya said some cases of the syndrome were caused when an
acute infection set off a recurrence of latent infections of Epstein Barr virus
and HHV-6, two pathogens that most people are exposed to in childhood. Ms.
Flowers, the former figure skater, had high levels of antibodies to both
viruses and was one of Dr. Montoyas initial C.F.S. patients.
Six months after starting treatment, Ms. Flowers said, she was
able to go snowboarding and take yoga and ballet classes. Now I pace
myself, but Im probably 75 percent of normal, she said.
Many patients point to another problem with chronic fatigue
syndrome: the name itself, which they say trivializes their condition and has
discouraged researchers, drug companies and government agencies from taking it
seriously. Many patients prefer the older British term, myalgic
encephalomyelitis, which means muscle pain with inflammation of the brain
and spinal chord, or a more generic term, myalgic encephalopathy.
You can change peoples attributions of the
seriousness of the illness if you have a more medical-sounding name, said
Dr. Leonard Jason, a professor of community psychology at
DePaul University in
Chicago. |