Literature DB >> 2249024

Aerobic work capacity in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.

M S Riley1, C J O'Brien, D R McCluskey, N P Bell, D P Nicholls.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the aerobic work capacity of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome and compare it with that of two control groups, and to assess the patients' perception of their level of activity before and during illness.
DESIGN: A symptom limited exercise treadmill test with on line gas analysis and blood sampling was used. Subjects were assessed by one investigator, who was blind to the group which they were in.
SETTING: Department of medicine, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast.
SUBJECTS: 13 Patients (10 women, three men) who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Two control groups of similar age, sex, and body weight: 13 normal subjects (10 women, three men) and seven patients (five women, two men) with the irritable bowel syndrome. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Aerobic work capacity as assessed by several variables such as length of time on treadmill, heart rate, and biochemical measurements; Borg score; and visual analogue scores of perceived level of physical activity.
RESULTS: The patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome had a reduced exercise capacity compared with that of the other subjects, spending a significantly shorter time on the treadmill. They had a significantly higher heart rate at submaximal levels of exertion and at stage III exertion had significantly higher blood lactate concentrations. Using a Borg score, they showed a significantly altered perception of their degree of physical exertion with a mean score of 8.2 compared with 6.6 and 5.3 for the normal subjects and patients with the irritable bowel syndrome respectively. Using a visual analogue scale they indicated that they had a greater capacity for activity before illness than had the patients with the irritable bowel syndrome, but the scores were not significantly different between the two groups. Both groups of patients indicated reduced activity at the time of testing. Normal controls and patients with the irritable bowel syndrome aspired to a greater level of activity than their current level, but the patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome aspired to a level similar to that which they had had before their illness.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome have reduced aerobic work capacity compared with normal subjects and patients with the irritable bowel syndrome. They also have an altered perception of their degree of exertion and their premorbid level of physical activity.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2249024      PMCID: PMC1664147          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.301.6758.953

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  14 in total

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Authors:  G P Holmes; J E Kaplan; N M Gantz; A L Komaroff; L B Schonberger; S E Straus; J F Jones; R E Dubois; C Cunningham-Rundles; S Pahwa
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2.  Reproducibility of cardiopulmonary parameters during exercise in patients with chronic cardiac failure. The need for a preliminary test.

Authors:  J S Elborn; C F Stanford; D P Nicholls
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3.  Evidence for a fatigue-induced reflex inhibition of motoneuron firing rates.

Authors:  J J Woods; F Furbush; B Bigland-Ritchie
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4.  The postviral fatigue syndrome--an analysis of the findings in 50 cases.

Authors:  P O Behan; W M Behan; E J Bell
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5.  Chronic fatigue and myalgia syndrome: mitochondrial and glycolytic studies in skeletal muscle.

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Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1987-06       Impact factor: 10.154

6.  Coxsackie B viruses and myalgic encephalomyelitis.

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7.  Excessive intracellular acidosis of skeletal muscle on exercise in a patient with a post-viral exhaustion/fatigue syndrome. A 31P nuclear magnetic resonance study.

Authors:  D L Arnold; P J Bore; G K Radda; P Styles; D J Taylor
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8.  Cardiac function at rest and with exercise in the chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  T J Montague; T J Marrie; G A Klassen; D J Bewick; B M Horacek
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9.  Normal muscle strength and fatigability in patients with effort syndromes.

Authors:  M J Stokes; R G Cooper; R H Edwards
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1988-10-22

10.  Postviral fatigue syndrome: persistence of enterovirus RNA in muscle and elevated creatine kinase.

Authors:  L C Archard; N E Bowles; P O Behan; E J Bell; D Doyle
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  1988-06       Impact factor: 5.344

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  36 in total

1.  Autonomic function in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  P M Soetekouw; J W Lenders; G Bleijenberg; T Thien; J W van der Meer
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2.  Aerobic work capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  S D Rosen; J C King; J B Wilkinson; P G Nixon
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1990-11-24

3.  Conversation piece. Interview by P. D. Welsby.

Authors:  E G Dowsett
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4.  Does the stressed patient with chronic fatigue syndrome hyperventilate?

Authors:  M H Lavietes; B H Natelson; D L Cordero; S P Ellis; W N Tapp
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5.  Differences in ME and CFS Symptomology in Patients with Normal and Abnormal Exercise Test Results.

Authors:  Stephanie L McManimen; Leonard A Jason
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Review 6.  Chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  S Wessely
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1991-08       Impact factor: 10.154

7.  Aerobic work capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  M Mäntysaari
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1991-01-05

8.  Exercise tolerance testing in a prospective cohort of adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome and recovered controls following infectious mononucleosis.

Authors:  Ben Z Katz; Steven Boas; Yukiko Shiraishi; Cynthia J Mears; Renee Taylor
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  2010-05-06       Impact factor: 4.406

9.  Vagal tone is reduced during paced breathing in patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  S A Sisto; W Tapp; S Drastal; M Bergen; I DeMasi; D Cordero; B Natelson
Journal:  Clin Auton Res       Date:  1995-06       Impact factor: 4.435

10.  Cognitive impairment in patients with chronic fatigue: a preliminary study.

Authors:  E McDonald; H Cope; A David
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1993-07       Impact factor: 10.154

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