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Release Date: November 9, 1999
Contact: Susan K. Johnson, PhD
(704) 547-2025
skjohnso@email.uncc.edu
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Not Fully Understood
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a "multidimensional illness experience"
that is not well-understood by researchers and health care professionals, according to
scientists at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and the University of Medicine
and Dentistry at the New Jersey Medical School.
The researchers conducted an extensive review of recent studies addressing the
definition, prevalence, prognosis, causes, and treatment of CFS. Their research appears in
the current issue (Vol. 21, No. 3) of Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
"CFS is a frustrating illness for its sufferers, their physicians and allied
health care professionals, and the scientists studying it," said Susan K. Johnson,
PhD, head of the study. "Although CFS has been the focus of increased research
efforts in the past decade, a fractious lack of consensus exists on how it should be
defined, and insufficient progress has been made toward understanding its etiology and
prognosis, and toward designing effective treatments."
Definitions of CFS have evolved over time. According to a 1994 joint Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention/National Institutes of Health working group, CFS involves
six-month's duration of persistent, unexplained fatigue combined with other symptoms
such as cognitive impairment, sore throat, tender neck or lymph nodes, muscle pain, joint
paint, unusual headache, unrefreshing sleep, and more than 24 hours of post-exertional
malaise.
Just as definitions of CFS vary, the literature review also showed that estimates of
its prevalence also vary. Studies in the United States have estimated that as many as 380
out of every 100,000 people suffer from the syndrome, which most often afflicts
middle-aged women.
The researchers also note that debate continues as to whether CFS is an emotional
disorder or an organic disease. Some researchers have postulated that CFS is a
manifestation of a psychiatric condition such as hypochondriasis, somatization disorder,
or forms of depression, although patterns of CFS generally differ from those of
depression. Other scientists contend that CFS is a medical illness resulting from a virus
or an infection or from neuroendocrine abnormalities.
The research was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health.
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Annals of Behavioral Medicine is the official peer-reviewed publication
of The Society of Behavioral Medicine. For information about the journal, contact Arthur
Stone, PhD, 516-632-8833.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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