Trial Report Fatigability and stress reactivity in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome versus healthy controls, 2024, Bogaerts

Discussion in 'ME/CFS research' started by Dolphin, Sep 14, 2024.

  1. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    https://documentserver.uhasselt.be/handle/1942/43513
    https://documentserver.uhasselt.be/bitstream/1942/43513/1/EAPM 2024_Katleen Bogaerts.pdf

    Title: Fatigability and stress reactivity in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome versus healthy controls

    Authors: BOGAERTS, Katleen
    DOOMS, Ynse
    VAN DEN HOUTE, Maaike
    Coppieters, Iris
    Claes, Stephan
    Vergaelen, Elfi
    Van den Bergh, Omer
    Van Oudenhove, Lukas

    Issue Date: 2024

    Source: 11th annual scientific conference of the European Association of Psychosomatic
    Medicine (EAPM), Lausanne, Switzerland, 2024, June 12-15

    Abstract:

    Introduction:

    Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a biopsychosocial disorder, with physical and cognitive fatigue and increased fatigability as core symptoms. This study evaluates fatigability and stress reactivity in patients with CFS and healthy controls (HC).

    Methods:

    Patients with CFS (n=31) and HC (n=24) performed the Maastricht Acute Stress Test (MAST - stress), the Paced Auditory Serial Attention Task (PASAT - mental fatigue), and an arm-leg cycling task (physical fatigue). Before, during and after the three tasks, participants rated subjective stress, intensity of mental fatigue and intensity of physical fatigue, respectively. In addition, data of the Checklist Individual Strength (CIS-20), a questionnaire measuring various aspects of fatigue retrospectively over the past, was collected.

    Results:

    Patients experienced more stress (main effect of group, p=0.0008), higher mental fatigability (group*time interaction effect, p=0.0368), and higher physical fatigability (group*time interaction effect, p<0.0001) and had a higher score on the CIS-20 questionnaire (p<0.0001) compared to HC. Additionally, patients’ fatigue recovered more slowly up to 24 hours after performing the cycling task (p<0.0001) and the PASAT (p=0.0077) compared to HC. Finally, the link between stress reactivity and fatigability was evaluated using mixed model analyses with AUCg, representing increase in stress scores during the MAST, as independent variable. Participants with a higher stress response experienced higher mental (p=0.0183) and physical fatigue (p=0.0312) during and after the PASAT and cycling task, respectively, and higher clinical daily life fatigue scores on the CIS-20 questionnaire (p=0.0029).

    Conclusion:

    In accordance with core CFS symptomatology, patients with CFS experience more physical and mental fatigability and they recover more slowly from physical and mental efforts than HC. Additionally, patients with CFS experience higher stress levels compared to controls during a validated stress task. Our results show that subjects who experience more stress, are also prone to experience more core CFS symptoms.

    Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/43513
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2024.111707
    ISI #: 001276847900011
    Category: C2
    Type: Conference Material
    Appears in Collections: Research publications

     
    Last edited: Sep 14, 2024
  2. Trish

    Trish Moderator Staff Member

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    I'd put that the other way around. Patients who experience more CFS symptoms are likely to find the testing process more stressful.
     
    Sean, obeat, MeSci and 14 others like this.
  3. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Again some of this would actually make sense if they simply replaced stress with exertion, which in 95-99% of all circumstances is what it actually means. Otherwise it just doesn't, it gets the dynamic backward and nothing else makes sense from that point on.
     
    Sean, hotblack, Hutan and 11 others like this.
  4. MrMagoo

    MrMagoo Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Person with leg amputated finds it harder to walk and it takes a greater toll than for healthy control. Solution- convince person they still have two legs.
     
    Sean, MeSci, hotblack and 5 others like this.

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