Working with uncertainty: health professionals & children with CFS/ME

Research abstract:

This grounded theory study explores conceptualisations of chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis from semi-structured interviews with 10 health-care professionals working with children and adolescents.

The findings suggest that a lack of a clear empirical understanding of chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis leads to ‘working with uncertainty’, whereby health-care professionals utilise previous experiences to make sense of the condition and inform their clinical practice.

How health-care professionals make sense of chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis may influence the labels given to young people and the interventions they receive. The findings provide insight into a currently understudied area, and highlight potential avenues for further research and clinical practice.

Working with uncertainty: A grounded theory study of health-care professionals’ experiences of working with children and adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome, by MR Marks, JC Huws, L Whitehead in J Health Psychol. 2015 May 8. pii [Epub ahead of print]

 

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Gwyn’s sponsored walk for ME Research UK

Ex ME Sufferer Gwyn Hopkins is to walk 150 miles to raise money for charity ME Research UK.

 

“I suffered from ME. for 5 years, at first bed bound, then in a wheelchair.  I made a complete recovery by the end of 2003.  In June 2006 I backpacked across Wales 230 miles and raised money for ME Research UK.

ME Research UK is a charity funding biomedical research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (also known as ME/CFS) and related illnesses. Their principal aim is to commission and fund high-quality scientific (biomedical) investigation

Over the last few years I’ve walked over 870 miles for the charity. When asked why I do it, I say because I can and it’s a joy to feel well and be out in nature again after spending years in bed. This walk is special to me because it will mean I’ll have walked over 1,000 miles for charity since my recovery.

And if I can help or inspire ME sufferers at the same time, that’s great. I think ME sufferers are the forgotten people, often living between their own four walls with very little support or understanding. I was told I had very little hope of making a complete recovery and I want others to realise they should never give up. I made it thanks to Complementary Therapies and great family support.

I’m happy to talk to sufferers and their carers if they wish to contact me.

On June 10th 2015 I will start from Cardigan, head towards Lampeter, then up to Lake Bala and across to Llangollen. I will be mostly camping on route.

To donate to the charity, visit www.justgiving.com/GwynethHopkins

Or Text GHME88 then the amount (£1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or £10) to 70070

gwyn@gwynhopkins.co.uk    www.gwynhopkins.co.uk  07950160389

 

 

 

 

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The essential features of ME & CFS need to be defined

Research abstract:

Considerable debate surrounds the search for the defining features of patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

Current case definitions were created through clinical consensus. Failure to operationalize these case definitions has led to considerable variability in the identification of patients. In addition, some case definitions do not require cardinal symptoms of this illness, whereas other case definitions do require core symptoms of this illness, and these latter case criteria appear to identify a more impaired group of patients.

Criterion variance is most likely to occur when operationally explicit criteria do not exist for diagnostic categories, or when there are varying criteria for contrasting case definitions, which is an impediment to the research in this field.

To deal with this problem, it is possible to differentiate those that meet more loosely defined criteria from those that are more narrowly and defined, thus differentiating CFS from ME. In order to progress the search for biological markers and effective treatments, essential features need to be operationalized and broadly used to increase the probability that individuals included in samples have the same underlying illness.

Defining essential features of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, by Leonard A. Jason, Madison Sunnquist, Abigail Brown & Jordan Reed in Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, May 6, 2015

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Blood test found to distinguish IBS

Research abstract

Diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is diagnosed through clinical criteria after excluding “organic” conditions, and can be precipitated by acute gastroenteritis.

Cytolethal distending toxin B (CdtB) is produced by bacteria that cause acute gastroenteritis, and a post-infectious animal model demonstrates that host antibodies to CdtB cross-react with vinculin in the host gut, producing an IBS-like phenotype. Therefore, we assessed circulating anti-CdtB and anti-vinculin antibodies as biomarkers for D-IBS in human subjects. Subjects with D-IBS based on Rome criteria (n=2375) were recruited from a large-scale multicenter clinical trial for D-IBS (TARGET 3).

Subjects with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) (n=142), subjects with celiac disease (n=121), and healthy controls (n=43) were obtained for comparison. Subjects with IBD and celiac disease were recruited based on the presence of intestinal complaints and histologic confirmation of chronic inflammatory changes in the colon or small intestine. Subjects with celiac disease were also required to have an elevated tTG and biopsy.

All subjects were aged between 18 and 65 years. Plasma levels of anti-CdtB and anti-vinculin antibodies were determined by ELISA, and compared between groups. Anti-CdtB titers were significantly higher in D-IBS subjects compared to IBD, healthy controls and celiac disease (P<0.001). Anti-vinculin titers were also significantly higher in IBS (P<0.001) compared to the other groups.

The area-under-the-receiver operating curves (AUCs) were 0.81 and 0.62 for diagnosis of D-IBS against IBD for anti-CdtB and anti-vinculin, respectively. Both tests were less specific in differentiating IBS from celiac disease. Optimization demonstrated that for anti-CdtB (optical density≥2.80) the specificity, sensitivity and likelihood ratio were 91.6%, 43.7 and 5.2, respectively, and for anti-vinculin (OD≥1.68) were 83.8%, 32.6 and 2.0, respectively.

These results confirm that anti-CdtB and anti-vinculin antibodies are elevated in D-IBS compared to non-IBS subjects. These biomarkers may be especially helpful in distinguishing D-IBS from IBD in the workup of chronic diarrhea.

Development and validation of a biomarker for diarrhea-predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome in human subjects, by Mark Pimentel et al in PLOS One, 10(5)May 13, 2015

Definitive tests for Irritable Bowel Syndrome developed

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IOM report comment

Beyond Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: An IOM Report on Redefining an Illness, by Ellen Wright Clayton MD JD in JAMA March 17, 2015, Vol 313, No. 11

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is a multisystem and often long-lasting disorder, with manifestations that can cause substantial morbidity and can severely impair patients’ health and well-being. It is estimated that between 836 000 and 2.5 million individuals are affected in the United States.1,2 Patients with ME/CFS are typically unable to perform their normal activities, and as many as one-fourth are homebound or bedridden, sometimes for extended periods.3 As a result, the personal and social effects and ramifications of this disease are enormous.

However, ME/CFS is poorly accepted and poorly understood, and the characteristics necessary to make the diagnosis are contested. Patients’ concerns are often met with dismay and skepticism, if not outright dismissal. Clinicians, in turn, are confronted by competing definitions, which were usually developed for research and are quite complex and difficult to implement in a busy clinical practice. Patients who are fortunate enough and persistent enough to receive a correct diagnosis frequently report long delays before their disorder was identified. It is almost certainly the case that the majority of affected patients are never diagnosed. This is unfortunate because effective symptom management is often available, whereas the wrong interventions can make symptoms worse.

Making the diagnosis is essential for providing appropriate care. To that end, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), together with the National Institutes of Health, US Social Security Administration, US Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, tasked the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to develop “evidence-based clinical diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS for use by clinicians, using a consensus-building methodology,” with input from patients and clinicians; to “recommend whether new terminology for ME/CFS should be adopted”; and to create plans for disseminating these conclusions to clinicians. To meet its charge, the IOM committee heard testimony from patients, clinicians, and researchers, carefully reviewed almost one thousand public comments, and conducted a comprehensive literature review. Currently available evidence permitted the committee, in its newly released report,4 to identify symptoms and findings that collectively identify the disorder for which a new name was proposed, as discussed below. These criteria are set forth in the accompanying Box.

Frequency and severity of symptoms should be assessed. The diagnosis of systemic exertion intolerance disease (myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome) should be questioned if patients do not have these symptoms at least half of the time with moderate, substantial, or severe intensity.

To assist with diagnosis, the committee developed an algorithm incorporating these criteria as well as an extensive list of findings on history, physical examination, and, when needed to clarify symptoms, tests that support the diagnosis. Further details, including recommended checklists, are contained in the committee’s report.4 The committee called on HHS to develop focused, evidence-based tools that will help clinicians make this diagnosis efficiently. Patients with ME/CFS, like many other patients, often have comorbid conditions that clinicians also must be prepared to identify and treat.

The committee concluded that a new name—systemic exertion intolerance disease—was warranted to capture the essence of this disorder until causation and pathophysiology are better delineated by research. Although patients differ in their triggers and manifestations, the salient feature of this disorder is that any kind of exertion—physical, cognitive, emotional—can adversely affect these patients in many aspects of their biological function and in their lives, frequently severely and often for a prolonged period. “Myalgic encephalomyelitis,” for which many people who provided input to the IOM study through testimony and public comments advocated, simply does not describe this disorder.

“Chronic fatigue syndrome” fails to depict the complexity of this disease and is also unacceptable to many patients and their advocates, who reported that this term leads clinicians and others to belittle or even dismiss their disease. The new name, which should be accompanied by a new International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) code, also distinguishes this definition from previous ones. Thus, patients who meet these new criteria should be diagnosed with systemic exertion intolerance disease even if they also meet criteria for earlier variants of ME/CFS.

Patients will not be identified and treated if clinicians do not know about the disorder and how to diagnose it. To that end, the IOM report sets forth a variety of strategies that must be pursued to facilitate dissemination of these recommendations to clinicians, patients, and K-12 education professionals, such as school nurses and psychologists. The IOM is creating educational materials for patients and clinicians.

Although the committee was able to make high-quality recommendations based on the available evidence, the need for more research is clear. Most of the research that has been conducted to date has compared small numbers of affected patients with healthy controls, not with patients with other complex fatiguing disorders. This fact, coupled with years of limited funding, means that despite the dedicated efforts of researchers in this field, many questions remain unanswered. More needs to be learned about what causes this disorder, what factors affect its course, and what therapies work for which patients. New knowledge may make it possible to identify subsets of systemic exertion intolerance disease and to provide the foundation for better diagnosis and treatment.

The IOM’s new report4 provides the foundation for greater action to diagnose and treat patients with systemic exertion intolerance disease and to learn more about the disease that affects them. This opportunity must be seized. These patients, who for too long have received inadequate attention in research and clinical settings, deserve better.

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Prof Alan Light videos on fatigue and gene expression in ME/CFS

Professor Alan Light, from Utah University, talks about his involvement with ME  in videos posted on the Dutch Youtube site ME/cvs Vereniging.

  • no. 58  Fatigue – the differences between generalised fatigue and the fatigue of ME/CFS
  • no. 59  Genes & gene expression &  the genes involved in the fatigue of ME/CFS
  • no. 60  Gene expression markers of ME/CFS  and the relationship to the symptoms of ME.
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Increased susceptibility to upper respiratory tract infections in CFS

Research abstract:

Background:
Previous research has suggested that chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) patients report more upper respiratory tract illnesses (URTIs) than controls.

Aims
The present study aimed to replicate and extend this research.

Method
A prospective study of the incidence of URTIs was conducted. This was similar to previous work involving diary studies but also included objective measures of illness severity (e.g. nasal secretion; sub-lingual temperature) and infection (virus isolation from nasal swabs and antibody changes). Fifty-seven patients with CFS, diagnosed according to the 1994 CDC criteria, were recruited randomly from a
volunteer panel compiled of patients who had attended the Cardiff CFS outpatient clinic. A further 57 individuals without CFS were recruited from a general population research panel.

Results
The results confirmed that CFS patients report more upper respiratory virus infections and the virological results showed that this was not due to a reporting bias but reflected greater susceptibility to infection.

Conclusions
This increased susceptibility to infection in the CFS group can account for the increased reporting of URTIs found in this and previous studies.

Chronic fatigue syndrome and increased susceptibility to upper respiratory tract infections and illnesses, by Andrew P. Smith & Marie A. Thomas in  Fatigue, April 27, 2015

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ME/CFS – not simply chronic fatigue but multisystem disorder

Research abstract:

BACKGROUND:

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is a complex, chronic illness that is often disabling. This paper introduces the Chronic Fatigue Initiative, which conducted a large multi-center study to more fully characterize ME/CFS and ultimately to describe and understand the underlying mechanisms and pathogenesis of this illness.

METHODS

A total of 203 patients with ME/CFS (cases) and 202 matched healthy controls (HCs) were enrolled from 5 geographically different expert clinical sites to create a well-characterized population linked to a national biorepository. ME/CFS subjects were compared to a one-to-one matched HC population for analyses of symptoms and illness severity. Cases were further evaluated for frequency and severity of symptoms and symptom clusters, and the effects of illness duration and acute vs. gradual onset.

RESULTS

This study collected more than 4000 pieces of data from each subject in the study. Marked impairment was demonstrated for cases vs. controls. Symptoms of fatigue were identified, but also, nearly as frequent and severe, were symptoms of cognitive dysfunction, inflammation, pain and autonomic dysfunction. Potential subgrouping strategies were suggested by these identified symptom clusters: sleep, neurocognitive, autonomic, inflammatory, neuroinflammatory, gastrointestinal and endocrine symptoms.

CONCLUSIONS

Clearly, ME/CFS is not simply a state of chronic fatigue. These data indicate that fatigue severity is matched by cognitive, autonomic, pain, inflammatory and neuro-inflammatory symptoms as the predominant clinical features. These findings may assist in the clarification and validation of case definitions. In addition, the data can aid clinicians in recognizing and understanding the overall illness presentation. Framing ME/CFS as a multisystem disorder may assist in developing therapies targeting the multifaceted domains of illness.

Findings from a clinical and laboratory database developed for discovery of pathogenic mechanisms in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, by N.G. Klimas, G. Ironson, A. Carter, E. Balbin, L. Bateman, D. Felsenstein, S. Levine, D. Peterson, K. Chiu, A. Allen, K. Cunningham, C.G. Gottschalk, M. Fletcher, M. Hornig, C. Canning & A.L. Komaroff in  Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior, Volume 3,  Issue 2, 2015

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CFS patients want name to reflect physical symptoms

Research abstract:

OBJECTIVE:

Medically unexplained symptoms/syndromes are common, highly distressing and are often associated with profound disability. One of the controversies surrounding this area relates to which umbrella term should be used to group such symptoms. The purpose of this research was to establish the preferences of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) for an umbrella term for medically unexplained symptoms.

METHODS:

A cross-sectional mixed methods survey design was used. Participants were asked to indicate their three most preferred terms out of a list of commonly used terms and to provide any extra comments. Frequency analysis was employed to look at the preferences of terms for each rank. Comments were analysed using principles of inductive thematic analysis.

RESULTS:

Eighty-seven patients with CFS completed a self-report survey. The term “Persistent Physical Symptoms” was the most popular first choice term chosen by 20.7% of patients. Terms containing the word “physical” were consistently more likely to be chosen. Three main themes emerged from the thematic analysis: 1) Physical nature of the illness, 2) Stigma, and 3) Evaluation of the terms, giving a more in-depth understanding of the findings.

CONCLUSION:

According to CFS patients, an umbrella term has to reflect the physical experience of MUS.

The most popular terms for medically unexplained symptoms: The views of CFS patients, by F Picariello, S Ali, R Moss-Morris, T Chalder in J Psychosom Res. 2015 May;78(5):420-6 [Epub 2015 Feb 27]

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sheep dip

Demands grow for inquiry and debate into sheep dip scandal, by Tom Levitt in the Guardian, 27 April 2015

Cross-party support for inquiry and parliamentary debate after newly-published documents reveal government knew of health risk of mandatory chemical dip.
A former environment minister and more than a dozen MPs from across the political spectrum have backed calls for an inquiry and parliamentary debate into whether farmers were misled over the use of a dangerous chemical.

At least 500 farmers across the UK were left with debilitating health problems after using organophosphate-based (OP) chemicals to protect their sheep against parasites, under the government’s compulsory dipping programme which ran up until 1992.

Last week the Guardian revealed the then-government was privately warning of the dangers of exposure to even low doses of the chemical and criticising the safety measures offered by manufacturers, yet publicly criticising farmers who refused to use the chemical.

Shadow health secretary Andy Burnham called it a “major scandal” and demanded a Hillsborough-style disclosure of what was known, by whom and when. He has now been backed by MPs from the Liberal Democrats, Labour, Conservatives and Democratic Unionist Party, as well as a number of peers.

The list of supporting MPs includes former environment minister Michael Meacher who said he wanted a fully independent inquiry led by a judge or senior lawyer, and four members of the environment, food and rural affairs select committee.

Labour MP Jessica Morden said that if re-elected she would apply for a parliamentary debate on organophosphates and sheep dips, which would have to be addressed by a government minister.

Legal experts have also responded to the revelations by suggesting a number of farmers may have valid compensation claims.

“The fact that the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) was aware as far back as 1991 of the health risks associated with organophosphate use is shocking, particularly given that such knowledge has been denied for decades,” said Gene Matthews, a partner at the law firm Leigh Day.

“Had this HSE evidence been released shortly after it was written those individuals allegedly affected by OPs would have had an increased chance of holding the government, and the relevant companies, to account for the harm they claimed to have suffered,” he added.

The difficulty in directly linking chronic ill health and the use of OP chemicals has seen previous legal claims fail. The only successful court settlement in the UK was brought by a farm worker John Amos Hill in 1997. He won a compensation claim against his employer after suffering chronic ill health after using OPs, having not been given adequate warnings of the health risks of using the chemical or protective clothing.

A Sheep Dip Sufferers Support Group has recently been set up by Lancashire farmer Tom Rigby to help campaign for recognition for victims still alive today, many of whom have to pay for private treatment because the NHS does not officially recognise OP poisoning as a medical condition.

The full list of supporting MPs and peers calling for an inquiry or debate includes: Andy Burnham, Jamie Reed, Jessica Morden, Edward Leigh, Margaret Ritchie, Jim Shannon, Russell Brown, John Thurso, Lindsay Hoyle, Roger Williams, Neil Parish, Mary Glindon, Jesse Norman, Andrew George, Michael Meacher, Margaret Mar and Paul Tyler.

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