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Fatigue and perceived fatigability, not objective fatigability, are prevalent in people with post-COVID-19, 2022 Fietsam et al

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by Sly Saint, Dec 4, 2022.

  1. Sly Saint

    Sly Saint Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Abstract


    Persistent symptoms after acute COVID-19 infection, termed post-COVID-19 fatigue, occur in 44–70% of patients. Characterizing fatigue in this population is vital to determine the etiology of post-COVID-19 fatigue symptoms and to assess the effectiveness of potential interventions.

    The purpose of this study was to assess differences in perceived and objective fatigability between people with post-COVID-19 symptoms (N = 29, 20 females) and people who had COVID-19 but are not experiencing persistent symptoms (N = 20, 12 females).

    Perceived fatigability, fatigue, pain, and quality of life were assessed with the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS), Visual Analog Scale for Pain (VAS), and the EQ-5D-5L, respectively.

    Objective fatigability was evaluated with torque and work fatigue indices (FI-T and FI-W), calculated via an isokinetic fatigue task.

    The results revealed that, the subjects with post-COVID-19 symptoms had significantly higher FAS (p < 0.01), FSS (p < 0.01), VAS (p < 0.01), and EQ-5D-5L VAS (p < 0.01) scores compared to subjects without post-COVID-19 symptoms, indicating greater fatigue and perceived fatigability, increased pain, and worse quality of life.

    However, there were no differences between the two groups for the FI-Ts (all p ≥ 0.07) or FI-W (all p ≥ 0.08), indicating no differences in objective fatigability. This study found that people with post-COVID-19 symptoms have increased fatigue and perceived fatigability, but not objective fatigability, compared to subjects without post-COVID-19 symptoms.

    paywalled (but graphs available at link)
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00221-022-06518-0
     
    Last edited: Dec 4, 2022
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  2. Trish

    Trish Moderator Staff Member

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    Any idea what the fatiguability task involved? If it was for a too brief time or didn't involve enough repetitions it may not have shown up fatiguability.
     
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  3. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    This is a good example of actual biological reductionism. On what basis has it been decided that this single test is a reliable objective measure of fatigability? Is fatigability even well-defined enough to be of use? When fatigue is clearly not? When PEM is involved, another concept that medicine simply refuses to even bother learning. On the basis of a single arbitrary test, reality has been decided to be one way or another about an entire group of people, whose main feature is a wildly fluctuating illness with many grades and severity levels.

    This entire paradigm makes no sense at all. This is the opposite of comprehensive testing, so much effort to check one thing only, not even a relevant one, and what is even the point?

    Given the name "isokinetic fatigue task" and the figures referencing an extensor, the test is probably something like this:

    [​IMG]
     
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  4. Purple

    Purple Established Member

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    It spends some time exploring the idea that brain hypo-metabolism could be the cause of the perceived fatigue. It cites previous studies to support this, for example: "A review by Rudroff et al. (Rudroff et al. 2021) summarized studies in people with post-COVID-19 that showed FDG-PET hypo-metabolism in a variety of brain regions and associations with symptoms (Fleischer et al. 2022). For example, Guedj et al. (Guedj et al. 2021) found hypo-metabolism in the bilateral rectal/orbital gyrus (including the olfactory gyrus), hippocampus, temporal lobe (including the amygdala), bilateral pons/medulla brainstem, thalamus, and the bilateral cerebellum using FDG-PET in people with post-COVID-19 symptoms (Guedj et al. 2021). Importantly, this hypo-metabolism was associated with the patients’ symptoms (e.g., hyposmia/anosmia, cognitive impairment, pain and insomnia) (Guedj et al. 2021)."
     
  5. Sean

    Sean Moderator Staff Member

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    Was it a 2-day test protocol?
     
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  6. Purple

    Purple Established Member

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    sorry for the delay in answering . here is the study
     

    Attached Files:

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  7. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    Thanks @Purple and welcome to the forum. Do you have an association with this study?


    I agree. With the added complication of there being not just one group of people with one illness, but a range of health conditions that are currently lumped under various post-Covid-19 names.

    The abstract suggests that persistent symptoms after acute COVID-19 infection are termed 'post-COVID-19 fatigue' and 44 to 70% of patients experience this. This suggests that all patients with persistent symptoms experience fatigue, which of course they do not.
    The abstract is different to the introduction. The introduction lists some of the reported symptoms and suggests that fatigue occurs in 44 to 70% of patients. However, it is then noted that it has been reported that 71-87% of people reported fatigue 2-3 months after COVID-19 infection.
    There is therefore, a lack of clarity about fatigue. There is no mention at all of PEM and I did not spot any mention of the fluctuations that are typical of ME/CFS-like Long Covid. There is no stratification of people with persistent symptoms following a Covid-19 infection into groups based on symptoms e.g. PEM and no consideration of how fatigability might manifest in an illness where PEM is present.
     
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  8. Joan Crawford

    Joan Crawford Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Hmm I'm thinking a better conclusion might have been that the method used was unable and unsuitable to identifying or helping to elucidate in any way the symptoms patients experience. Not that there is some problem with patients perceptions of their own experience, which is I suspect how many will read and interpret the paper's results.
     
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  9. Purple

    Purple Established Member

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    Hi Hutan, thank you for the welcome. No I don't have an association with the study, I just saw the discussion and wanted to know what people thought once they had seen the whole thing. It just resonates with my husband's symptoms that almost everything seems to be a problem with his brain not functioning properly.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 10, 2022
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