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Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study

BACKGROUND: The lack of standardized criteria for defining chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has constrained research. The objective of this study was to apply the 1994 CFS criteria by standardized reproducible criteria. METHODS: This population-based case control study enrolled 227 adults identified f...

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Autores principales: Reeves, William C, Wagner, Dieter, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Jones, James F, Gurbaxani, Brian, Solomon, Laura, Papanicolaou, Dimitris A, Unger, Elizabeth R, Vernon, Suzanne D, Heim, Christine
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1334212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16356178
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-3-19
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author Reeves, William C
Wagner, Dieter
Nisenbaum, Rosane
Jones, James F
Gurbaxani, Brian
Solomon, Laura
Papanicolaou, Dimitris A
Unger, Elizabeth R
Vernon, Suzanne D
Heim, Christine
author_facet Reeves, William C
Wagner, Dieter
Nisenbaum, Rosane
Jones, James F
Gurbaxani, Brian
Solomon, Laura
Papanicolaou, Dimitris A
Unger, Elizabeth R
Vernon, Suzanne D
Heim, Christine
author_sort Reeves, William C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The lack of standardized criteria for defining chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has constrained research. The objective of this study was to apply the 1994 CFS criteria by standardized reproducible criteria. METHODS: This population-based case control study enrolled 227 adults identified from the population of Wichita with: (1) CFS (n = 58); (2) non-fatigued controls matched to CFS on sex, race, age and body mass index (n = 55); (3) persons with medically unexplained fatigue not CFS, which we term ISF (n = 59); (4) CFS accompanied by melancholic depression (n = 27); and (5) ISF plus melancholic depression (n = 28). Participants were admitted to a hospital for two days and underwent medical history and physical examination, the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, and laboratory testing to identify medical and psychiatric conditions exclusionary for CFS. Illness classification at the time of the clinical study utilized two algorithms: (1) the same criteria as in the surveillance study; (2) a standardized clinically empirical algorithm based on quantitative assessment of the major domains of CFS (impairment, fatigue, and accompanying symptoms). RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-four participants had no exclusionary conditions at the time of this study. Clinically empirical classification identified 43 subjects as CFS, 57 as ISF, and 64 as not ill. There was minimal association between the empirical classification and classification by the surveillance criteria. Subjects empirically classified as CFS had significantly worse impairment (evaluated by the SF-36), more severe fatigue (documented by the multidimensional fatigue inventory), more frequent and severe accompanying symptoms than those with ISF, who in turn had significantly worse scores than the not ill; this was not true for classification by the surveillance algorithm. CONCLUSION: The empirical definition includes all aspects of CFS specified in the 1994 case definition and identifies persons with CFS in a precise manner that can be readily reproduced by both investigators and clinicians.
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spelling pubmed-13342122006-01-19 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study Reeves, William C Wagner, Dieter Nisenbaum, Rosane Jones, James F Gurbaxani, Brian Solomon, Laura Papanicolaou, Dimitris A Unger, Elizabeth R Vernon, Suzanne D Heim, Christine BMC Med Research Article BACKGROUND: The lack of standardized criteria for defining chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has constrained research. The objective of this study was to apply the 1994 CFS criteria by standardized reproducible criteria. METHODS: This population-based case control study enrolled 227 adults identified from the population of Wichita with: (1) CFS (n = 58); (2) non-fatigued controls matched to CFS on sex, race, age and body mass index (n = 55); (3) persons with medically unexplained fatigue not CFS, which we term ISF (n = 59); (4) CFS accompanied by melancholic depression (n = 27); and (5) ISF plus melancholic depression (n = 28). Participants were admitted to a hospital for two days and underwent medical history and physical examination, the Diagnostic Interview Schedule, and laboratory testing to identify medical and psychiatric conditions exclusionary for CFS. Illness classification at the time of the clinical study utilized two algorithms: (1) the same criteria as in the surveillance study; (2) a standardized clinically empirical algorithm based on quantitative assessment of the major domains of CFS (impairment, fatigue, and accompanying symptoms). RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-four participants had no exclusionary conditions at the time of this study. Clinically empirical classification identified 43 subjects as CFS, 57 as ISF, and 64 as not ill. There was minimal association between the empirical classification and classification by the surveillance criteria. Subjects empirically classified as CFS had significantly worse impairment (evaluated by the SF-36), more severe fatigue (documented by the multidimensional fatigue inventory), more frequent and severe accompanying symptoms than those with ISF, who in turn had significantly worse scores than the not ill; this was not true for classification by the surveillance algorithm. CONCLUSION: The empirical definition includes all aspects of CFS specified in the 1994 case definition and identifies persons with CFS in a precise manner that can be readily reproduced by both investigators and clinicians. BioMed Central 2005-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC1334212/ /pubmed/16356178 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-3-19 Text en Copyright © 2005 Reeves et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Reeves, William C
Wagner, Dieter
Nisenbaum, Rosane
Jones, James F
Gurbaxani, Brian
Solomon, Laura
Papanicolaou, Dimitris A
Unger, Elizabeth R
Vernon, Suzanne D
Heim, Christine
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title_full Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title_fullStr Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title_full_unstemmed Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title_short Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
title_sort chronic fatigue syndrome – a clinically empirical approach to its definition and study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1334212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16356178
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-3-19
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