Three Chord Monty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Life-Threatening Malnutrition in Very Severe ME/CFS
Helen Baxter, Nigel Speight, William Weir
Healthcare (MDPI), Open access
Abstract
Very severe myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), (also known as chronic fatigue syndrome) can lead to problems with nutrition and hydration. The reasons can be an inability to swallow, severe gastrointestinal problems tolerating food or the patient being too debilitated to eat and drink. Some patients with very severe ME will require tube feeding, either enterally or parenterally. There can often be a significant delay in implementing this, due to professional opinion, allowing the patient to become severely malnourished. Healthcare professionals may fail to recognize that the problems are a direct consequence of very severe ME, preferring to postulate psychological theories rather than addressing the primary clinical need. We present five case reports in which delay in instigating tube feeding led to severe malnutrition of a life-threatening degree. This case study aims to alert healthcare professionals to these realities.
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/4/459/htm
Case study covering five patients.
Helen Baxter, Nigel Speight, William Weir
Healthcare (MDPI), Open access
Abstract
Very severe myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), (also known as chronic fatigue syndrome) can lead to problems with nutrition and hydration. The reasons can be an inability to swallow, severe gastrointestinal problems tolerating food or the patient being too debilitated to eat and drink. Some patients with very severe ME will require tube feeding, either enterally or parenterally. There can often be a significant delay in implementing this, due to professional opinion, allowing the patient to become severely malnourished. Healthcare professionals may fail to recognize that the problems are a direct consequence of very severe ME, preferring to postulate psychological theories rather than addressing the primary clinical need. We present five case reports in which delay in instigating tube feeding led to severe malnutrition of a life-threatening degree. This case study aims to alert healthcare professionals to these realities.
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/4/459/htm
Case study covering five patients.
The potential adverse consequences for the patient of their problem not being promptly recognized and responded to are considerable. There is often a significant delay in implementing tube feeding in patients experiencing difficulties obtaining nutrition and hydration. Tube feeding is often not instigated until the malnutrition becomes life threatening. Healthcare professionals seem to fail to recognize that the inability to eat and drink is a direct consequence of the severity of the ME, instead preferring to postulate psychological theories.
Two of the patients’ ME was so severe that they were unable to read, write or type and in one case speak.
In respect of the repeated finding that patients were wrongly regarded as having an eating disorder as a cause for their nutritional problems, it is lacking in logic for the doctors concerned not to have treated this on its own merit. Tube feeding, with or without a court order, is frequently resorted to in cases of an eating disorder. Either the doctors were not serious in making this diagnosis or they were somehow generally prejudiced against the patients on account of their being cases of ME/CFS. In each case, the doctors resorted to making inappropriate psychological diagnoses without positive evidence of psychopathology.